Thank you.
I'd like to clarify something relating to Mr. Dalton's questions.
Regarding that funding, it was Kathleen Weil, a former member of Alliance Québec, who launched the program. The Legault government decided to keep funding it.
I think you're painting a false and biased portrait of the situation. Let's look at other indicators, such as the median. We know that this indicator doesn't take into account the fact that many anglophones earn very high incomes. The median doesn't take that disparity into account. Statistics Canada data aren't available yet, but if we look at mother tongue, language spoken at home and language used at work, we get a very different portrait. I don't know if you've looked at those numbers.
One researcher, Gilles Grenier, studied the consequences for people who worked in English compared to those who don't work in English. He found that francophones who work in English have higher incomes than those who work only in French. For newcomers, working only in English in the Montreal area pays better than working only in French.
A recent Office québécois de la langue française study found that people who use only English at work earn, on average, $46,000 per year, which is 20% more than the average income of those who work only in French. The situation is very difficult.
The fact is, Mr. Salter, part of the work you do when you target newcomers, immigrants, conflicts with Quebec's efforts to francize them.