Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. Stursberg, here are my observations. First, you work for a public company. Francophones in Canada represent about 25% of the population. There is a critical mass in Quebec, but there are also francophones elsewhere throughout Canada. Consequently, they must see themselves reflected in a music hall of fame that reflects the entire country, Canada, 25% of the population of which speak a different language and have a different culture than that of English Canada. They must be included in a gala that wants to represent all of Canada.
It can't be any other way. It's as if we decided to show some goals in hockey because so and so scored them and not show other goals made by those who speak a different language or have a different culture. That wouldn't work.
Here, we're talking about songs; we're not talking about an English show where all the texts are in French. It's about songs, and a song can be in any language. When the band Kashtin or the Naskapis from the North Shore sang, they did so in their language, which is Montagnais. I saw them sing on the CBC and on the SRC. They weren't edited out because they didn't speak the language of the public station.
The message you're sending us—and I'm a sovereignist—is the rejection by English Canadians of Quebec francophone, Franco-Canadian, Acadian culture, and so on, during a gala of the Canadian music hall of fame. That message is wrong. I have English-speaking friends who are as interested in what is happening in French music, be it from Quebec or Acadie, as what is happening elsewhere in the world or in Canada in music.
As a result, there must not be such a barrier, please. Francophone Quebec taxpayers, just as much as anglophones, must see themselves reflected on television and on the radio, during a broadcast of the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame gala, which must reflect the two official languages communities in Canada: the Quebec nation and the Canadian nation.
Stop saying that people don't want to see it. It's not true. It's public television. If they want to watch private Canadian, Quebec, American or any other television station, that's their right. But if they stopped to watch the Songwriters Hall of Fame gala, they're entitled to see both the Eva Avilas of the world, who sing and talk Spanish, French and English, and the Claude Dubois, even if they are less well known, in your opinion. You have every interest in exposing people to all artists.
This is not a question, it's a comment. I hope that you are going to take note of it for the next gala. In any case, the minutes of this meeting will be available.