Quebec government says it will table expanded language law during next session
MONTREAL — Quebec’s minister responsible for the French language said he will introduce a bill strengthening the province’s language law when the legislature returns from its winter break.
Simon Jolin-Barrette said he’s concerned that the use of French in the province is in decline, particularly in Montreal. “Quebec was born in French and it will remain that way,” he told reporters Tuesday.
The state of the French language in Quebec — particularly in Montreal’s downtown core and among immigrants — is a constant preoccupation of nationalists, who have demanded for years the government reinforce the 1977 language law, known as Bill 101. Politicians and media personalities regularly lament how they are greeted in English in downtown Montreal stores.
Quebec’s office of the French language, which is the enforcement arm of Bill 101, reported in 2019 that on the island of Montreal, the percentage of people who have French as a mother tongue declined from 52.1 per cent to 46.1 per cent between 1996 and 2016.