I think it would be quite difficult to bring our first ministers together at a meeting. For some of them, their interests are more related to their geography and demographics. They have their respective constraints. However, there are many organizations and thinkers across Canada who would be willing to celebrate and commemorate—we will see this year—the progress made in terms of linguistic duality and bilingualism. Despite the timidity I mentioned, the fact remains that significant progress has been made. We highlight the important progress we have made and agree on what needs to be built together.
I will quickly give you a more concrete example, if I may. I have the opportunity to do a lot of analysis of our censuses. We are pleased that immersion schools are so full that people have to wait to enrol their children. However, despite the significant investments that have been made in immersion, we very often see, particularly outside Quebec, that after about 10 years, people who have learned French as a second language significantly lose their ability to speak both languages because they don't have enough opportunity to interact in the second language. This is reflected in the census.