The Northwest Territories are just starting to take an organized approach to immigration, and it seems very promising. In fact, we have a good relationship with the federal Department of Immigration. However, it's something that's more or less understood in various parts of the country.
A few weeks ago, here in Ottawa, at a Senate committee, I was asked a question as to whether we weren't afraid of not finding francophones in the future. It was a question about who the real francophones would be.
I would answer that we should remember the history of western Canada. In western Canada, we could also ask who the real anglophones are because once the Metis and aboriginal resistance was beaten, the Canadian west was inundated with people from throughout the world. It was anglophone assimilation and a lot was done to assimilate those people. Today, the same question applies. Who are the anglophones in Canada? That's a bit puzzling. If you want to make things a problem for one party, they can be made hard for the other party too.
So we see a better future and certainly a diversified one. Culturally speaking we see a wealth that's difficult to image by jumping head first into—