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French-English Relations in Canada

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Title: French-English Relations in Canada


1
French-English Relations in Canada
  • A clash of paradigms

2
Language cleavages are politically explosive
  • Closely tied to culture and religion
  • Fundamental to identity
  • Governments cannot disengage from language as
    they can from other cleavages
  • Communication is fundamental to democratic
    politics language is central to communication

3
Demographics (2001 census)
Mother Tongue Mother Tongue Mother Tongue Home Language Home Language Home Language Biling
Eng Fr Oth Eng Fr Oth Biling
Quebec 8.3 81.4 10.3 10.5 83.1 6.5 40.8
ROC 75.2 4.4 20.4 85.6 2.7 11.7 10.3
Canada 59.1 22.9 18.0 67.5 22.0 10.5 17.7
4
Realities of language in Canada
  • Most of Canadas Francophones live in Quebec
  • Linguistic minorities tend to be small in most
    provinces (except for New Brunswick)
  • The bilingual belt
  • Process of linguistic assimilation of linguistic
    minorities
  • English is a socially powerful language

5
Canada is a federal state
  • Only a small proportion of the worlds countries
    (less than ten per cent) are federal nations
  • Canada is one of the oldest and most successful
    federal states in the world
  • Federalism can be used to accommodate diversity
  • Canadian federalism reflects the ways Quebec was
    different in 1867
  • The emphasis was on Quebecs Catholicism, not its
    language

6
Two paradigms for accommodating linguistic
diversity
  • Territorial approach
  • Language of public life contingent on where you
    live
  • Idea is to provide a sense of linguistic security
    for minorities
  • Bilingualism typically limited to national
    organizations

7
Two paradigms for accommodating linguistic
diversity
  • Personality approach
  • Language policy defined in terms of rights
  • Language rights are attached to individuals, not
    to territories
  • Emphasis on personal mobility and personal
    bilingualism
  • Bilingualism pervasive

8
Two theses
  • French-English relations can best be understood
    as a clash between these two paradigms
  • Because federalism was the institutional solution
    designed to resolve the problem of accommodating
    Quebec, much of the debate centres on Quebecs
    place in the federal system

9
The Quiet Revolution
  • Associated with government of Jean Lesage
    (1960-1966)
  • A period of modernization in Quebec
  • The provincial state replaced the church at the
    heart of Quebecs political life
  • Linguistic division of labour
  • Quebecs provincial government became more
    assertive about Quebecs place in Canada and
    federalism
  • Quebecois, not French Canadian

10
What did Quebec want?
  • Full control over provincial jurisdiction
  • The federal government to extricate itself from
    provincial jurisdiction
  • Greater provincial power
  • Increased say over federal institutions
  • Recognition of special status

11
The federal response
  • Rights-based approach to national bilingualism
  • Pierre Elliot Trudeau, Prime Minister from
    1968-1979, 1980-1984
  • Official Languages Act (1969)
  • Re-making the federal public service
  • Promoting linguistic minorities and personal
    bilingualism
  • A rejection of any special recognition of Quebec
  • Quebecs response was Bill 22

12
The rise of the sovereigntists
  • Parti Quebecois (PQ) founded by dissidents who
    left the provincial Liberal party
  • Led by Rene Levesque
  • PQ grew steadily in support
  • Won the 1976 provincial election with 41 of the
    vote and a majority government

13
Etapisme taking it slow
  • PQ settled on a step by step approach to
    sovereignty
  • Govern well (Bill 101)
  • Call a referendum to get a mandate to negotiate
    with Ottawa
  • Negotiate with Ottawa
  • Have the outcome of the negotiations ratified in
    another referendum

14
The 1980 referendum
  • A soft question asked for a mandate to negotiate
    sovereignty association
  • Bitter, divisive campaign
  • 60 Non 40 Oui
  • Economic fears loomed large in the vote
  • PQ may have miscalculated in its referendum
    strategy
  • PQ re-elected in 1981

15
Constitutional negotiations
  • Canada did not control the amendment of its own
    constitution
  • Trudeau wanted to patriate the constitution with
    a Charter of Rights
  • 8 provincial governments, including Quebecs
    opposed Trudeau
  • Compromise reached, but Quebec did not agree

16
Constitution Act, 1982
  • Applies to all of Canada, including Quebec, even
    though Quebec did not agree
  • Charter of Rights enshrined personality approach
    to national bilingualism in the constitution
  • Enhanced the idea of provincial equality Quebec
    did not achieve recognition of special status or
    increased power

17
Change at the top
  • Brian Mulroney takes over as Prime Minister in
    1984 wants to bring Quebec into the constitution
  • Now a Liberal provincial government, led by
    Robert Bourassa
  • Bourassa outlines five conditions for Quebec to
    sign the constitution

18
Quebecs five conditions
  • Recognition as a distinct society
  • Limitation on federal government intrusion in
    provincial jurisdiction
  • Role in appointing justices to the Supreme Court
    of Canada
  • Increased power over immigration
  • A veto over any constitutional change

19
Meech Lake Accord (1987)
  • Mulroney wins agreement of all ten premiers to
    change the constitution
  • Enshrines Quebecs five conditions in the
    constitution
  • Ten provincial governments and the federal
    government have to ratify the agreement within
    three years
  • Newfoundland and Manitoba fail to do so by 1990
    the Accord dies

20
Charlottetown Accord (1992)
  • Much anger in Quebec
  • Sovereigntist sentiment on the rise
  • Again, federal government and provinces agree on
    constitution package, called the Charlottetown
    Accord
  • Defeated in a national referendum 55 No, 45
    Yes
  • Defeated in Quebec as well

21
Reinvigorated sovereigntist movement
  • Bloc Quebecois forms as a national political
    party in 1990, wins 54 of Quebecs 75 seats in
    Parliament in 1993
  • Parti Quebecois wins the 1994 provincial election
  • Announces a referendum in 1995
  • Narrow victory for the federalists 50.6 Non,
    49.4 Oui
  • Federal government weak in referendum

22
Federal Response Plan A
  • A shaken federal government tries to respond to
    Quebecs historical demands
  • But limited because there is no appetite for
    constitutional reform in Canada
  • Passes Parliamentary resolutions to recognize
    Quebec as a distinct society and to give Quebec a
    veto

23
Federal Response Plan B
  • Legal challenge to constitutionality of Quebec
    sovereignty
  • Supreme Court of Canada in 1998 rules that it is
    unconstitutional for Quebec to secede without the
    consent of the other provinces, but if Quebeckers
    vote in a referendum to leave, the rest of Canada
    has to respond
  • Clarity Act sets out the rules for Quebec
    secession

24
The current situation
  • The essential problem remains unsolved
  • Quebeckers and much of Canada conceive of their
    country in different ways
  • Quebec Quebec is distinct and may require
    different powers
  • ROC all provinces are equal
  • Weve papered over the differences

25
The future?
  • Sovereigntist sentiment is currently in decline
  • Parti Quebecois lost the 2003 provincial election
    quite badly
  • Bloc Quebecois support is in decline
  • Demographic change in Quebec
  • Evidence that Quebeckers have grown tired of the
    debate over sovereignty
  • 55 (63 of those under 45) do not identify
    themselves as sovereigntist or federalist (CRIC)

26
For further reading
  • Kenneth McRoberts, Misconceiving Canada The
    Struggle for National Unity (Toronto Oxford
    University Press, 1997).
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