The work that is done in English-speaking Quebec with the French majority, the youth, is done by itself.
They are out there together. They're having a beer together; they're out there.
I believe that one of the great things about living in Quebec is that va-et-vient between young people, if we're talking about young people.
I think that the federal government should pay more attention to helping young English-speaking Quebeckers understand the value of their minority in Quebec.
There are quite a few very successful interchanges between
francophones in Quebec, to go outside Quebec.
They are very successful.
Francophones from outside Quebec come to Quebec and meet francophones there.
I think we have to pay more attention to our generation of young English-speaking Quebeckers who, in a certain sense, might be isolated in English-speaking Quebec because they're talking to young francophones.
What we see happening in the rest of Canada around the identity of the young francophone outside Quebec with the FESFO and the FJCF.... We don't have that in Quebec.
I think the federal government has an obligation to our young people in Quebec to invest in them to understand their relevance in the national conversation about being an official language minority community. It's okay.