Thank you.
I'm the anglophone you mentioned who sits on this committee and comes from Quebec. Having the opportunity to be here and to see a large number of anglophones who come from across Canada, I can say that many anglophones living outside Quebec are very interested in learning French because it's not imposed on them.
However, anglophones in Quebec tend more to speak English among themselves and not to want to learn French because that's their way of protecting their own language in the province. We're talking about ways to promote French, and I'm thinking of positive measures that wouldn't necessarily force them to speak French, but that, as Mr. Genuis said, would afford them more opportunities to do so once their high school course is over. Last week, some observers from Toronto told me they envied the fact that we speak French so well because we come from Quebec. They told me they really wanted to learn French. You don't hear that from anglophone students in Quebec, for the reasons I just mentioned.
You said the government could do a follow-up to the federal-provincial agreements. I'd like to know how you specifically recommend that we do that. How could we exercise this right of review with respect to those agreements and what they've achieved?