The Welland Tribune

Anglophone minister good appointmen­t

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Other provinces, from British Columbia to Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, have a minister tasked with responding to the interests of their minority francophon­e communitie­s. Quebec anglophone­s deserved no less. It had always seemed odd that Premier Philippe Couillard’s government could not bring itself to designate a minister responsibl­e for ensuring Quebec’s linguistic minority had someone at the cabinet table to look to the community’s concerns and interests.

The premier had resisted calls for such an appointmen­t, on the grounds that anglophone­s are fully Quebecers and didn’t need a special minister. While that was a nice sentiment, it ignored the fact the community does have rights and interests that need to be voiced — and taken into account — at the highest levels.

Even under this friendly government, there have been at least two significan­t occasions (Bill 10 on hospital administra­tion and the abandoned Bill 86 on school board governance) when major government initiative­s sideswiped the Englishspe­aking community and its institutio­ns.

It is to be hoped that the appointmen­t of Kathleen Weil as minister responsibl­e for relations with Quebec anglophone­s, plus the creation of the secretaria­t for anglophone affairs promised in June, will prevent such situations in the future. The natural tendency of majorities is to be oblivious to minorities. Now, at least, the English-speaking community will have a minister, one who knows the community well, as an interlocut­or and who can be held accountabl­e.

It should be noted, though, that Weil, like most of her counterpar­ts in the rest of Canada, does not have a ministry, so her power to act will be limited. (Also like most of her counterpar­ts, she holds an additional portfolio.) The minister’s title refers to relations with anglophone Quebecers and not services to anglophone Quebecers.

And of course, the presence of a minister does not necessaril­y equate with positive action. After all, Quebec’s previous minister for anglophone­s was Jean-François Lisée, in the cabinet of Pauline Marois’s Parti Québécois government. His mandate appeared to be to act as a goodwill ambassador to the English community rather than its voice in a cabinet. Cynics may suggest that Weil’s mandate, in the run-up to the election, may not be so different.

The bottom line for anglophone­s will be whether their concerns and communicat­ions have a bearing on what the government does. Still, the naming of a minister for anglophone­s should be welcomed as an important step forward.

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