I've spoken a lot about ensuring that we respect the unique cultures, traditions and history of the places we come from. Quebec has more of a social democratic history. It may be the one place in Canada where such a system could work better.
I am in favour of provincial jurisdiction and it is important on this issue, so Quebec is certainly free to follow a model that suits it. But Canada outside of Quebec does not have the same tradition. We do not have the same desire toward conformity, toward becoming Québécois. We do not have language goals. We have a diversity of immigrants, newcomers and refugees, people who come from ethnic backgrounds, people who come from different places, who desire to raise their children in a very broad diversity of ways. I believe it is very unlikely we will ever have enough money to fund that kind of diversity for the rest of Canada.
There is an established literature in academic literature in Quebec that talks about assimilationist goals and uniformity for people coming into Quebec, and that kind of thing is not present in the rest of Canada. From coast to coast to coast, we have diversity and have people, again, coming from elsewhere who desire to raise their children in very unique and diverse ways. They should not be discriminated against because they don't desire to use spaces in a child care system.