The francophone communities and their local allies have to... There are also anglophones who speak French. They are allies. I believe that a symbol as powerful as the Supreme Court should reflect that linguistic duality.
Anglophones are increasingly learning French. There is a law school at the University of Manitoba, for example. Those people came to see us, at the Collège universitaire, so we could agree that law courses would be given in French at the University of Manitoba. So that means that, there too, people see the importance of speaking both languages. That was unthinkable two or three years ago. It's starting to be done.
They say that unilingual individuals would be excluded from the Supreme Court. That might be the case in the immediate future, but you have to consider that more and more people will eventually learn French. In that perspective, we can say that, in the long term, that could make a real difference. People could speak both languages.