I want to say two things.
First, I graduated from an immersion school too. The government didn't grant a right to French-language education in my time.
Then, in the last 30 years, which I have spent in the Canadian francophonie, I have filed I don't know how many complaints. I'm here today to say that I don't see that anything has changed.
I'd like to go back to the point I raised earlier. I have never said, and would never say, that people should be compelled to learn a language, never ever. I come from Newfoundland and Labrador, a province where 26,000 young anglophones are learning French but are not being forced to do so.
However, madam, I think it's appalling that, after 50 years of bilingualism, a community college in New Brunswick hasn't come up with a French-language program for the nurses it's training to ensure they have a minimum level of proficiency in French once they complete their studies, when it knows perfectly well that those students will be applying for essentially bilingual positions upon graduation. On the other hand, all the students at the francophone community college are bilingual at the end of their studies. That's what I find appalling.
Anglophones aren't opposed to the language issue; they're opposed to the fact that someone has knowingly decided to deprive them of that option. I would even go so far as to say that there's a lack of political leadership. Instead we should ask ourselves what has to be done to have a bilingual province and to ensure that the anglophone and francophone communities feel they are being served. That's not what has been done, and the result is the People's Alliance.