We need francophone immigration, that's obvious. What the Statistics Canada study published last year showed is that no matter how much you increase the percentage of French-speaking immigrants, it has little impact on the decline of French. The hypothesis has even been put forward that immigrants could only enter Quebec if they were French-speaking and came from a country where the official language is French, and the conclusion was that even that would only slow the decline a little. Indeed, there are other phenomena at play, such as the low birth rate.
In addition, when we talk about acting on the composition of immigration, we forget that the percentage of immigrants in Quebec is 12%. So we're trying to act on that figure. I understand why we always want to intervene on this level, because we can't intervene on the birth rate. So we choose to intervene on the immigration front.
I can't help but say that we are indeed asking a lot from immigrants. They are asked to do jobs that we no longer want to do; they are asked to go to the regions because we don't want to go there; they are asked to have children because we don't want to have any; and they are also asked to switch to French overnight. But even if they did that, it wouldn't be enough.