I'm sorry, but I would like to say that there are some members of the Francophonie from my original country, la Roumanie, which is not a French-speaking country. They are people for whom it is not a mother tongue, but they speak French because in Europe you need to speak many foreign languages. I speak German, Italian, and so on. French is a little bit shaky for me. I need to think in Italian to speak French.
The fact is this. I am just looking at the example of Moncton. It made an impression on me how they succeeded in increasing the number of francophone people, bilingualism, and so on, but I think this success is connected with jobs and the economy. For example, in one of the largest provinces, which is my province of Ontario, I think there are opportunities to do the same thing eventually, but we need to have cooperation between the communities, the municipalities, the province, and the federal government.
We cannot expect that the federal government alone can have millions of road maps for everything. If we are not working in cooperation with all three levels of government—because there is only one taxpayer—we will not achieve the goal of making the French minority communities prosperous.