I'll reciprocate and answer in English, because I talk really fast in English too.
The answer to your first question is, yes, let's increase the number of permanent residents who are francophone. We need to do that not just because it's the right thing; the economic opportunity for Canada to be a destination of choice for people who want to live in French and work in French would blow you away. When I meet with organizations in western Canada—I was in Alberta a number of months ago with a network promoting francophone immigration—the opportunity to attract skilled workers to communities where they can live in the language of their choice is extraordinary. We need to embrace it for economic as well as moral reasons.
On express entry, new flexibilities that will come into effect this spring will allow us to choose workers through the federal economic streams for the first time based on the sector they work in, the region in which they plan to live and their linguistic competencies. We will have the ability to do a targeted draw based on a person's linguistic competencies, including whether they can speak French or whether they are francophone. This will create a flexible opportunity for me in the short term to further increase the number of francophone newcomers who obtain permanent residency. We plan to look at the best ways to do that in collaboration with communities across the country.