Immigrants would have 3 years to learn French, Quebec party leader says
Legault vows he’d boot those who fail test out of the province
MONTREAL— The perennially divisive topic of language politics surfaced on the Quebec campaign trail Friday as the leader of the Coalition Avenir Québec promised his government would force new immigrants to leave the province if they don’t learn French within three years.
After two weeks of campaigning nearly devoid of language talk, the issue jumped into the spotlight on Day 16 as party leaders responded to François Legault’s proposals with differing visions on how best to integrate immigrants into French-speaking Quebec.
Speaking early Friday, Legault said new immigrants would be given a temporary permit upon entry and then have three years to take free language courses and pass a basic French-language test.
Those who fail would not be granted permission to stay and would be considered to be in the country illegally, he said.
Legault said most people should pass easily, but he’s open to offering an extension or exemption to seniors or those with learning disabilities.
“I will be open to accommodations, if someone has learning difficulties,” he told reporters.
Legault said more than 50 per cent of immigrants who arrive in the province don’t speak French and that many of those end up leaving or facing high levels of unemployment.
He warned that under present conditions, the use of French will gradually disappear.
“It might take one, two, three generations, but it’s a matter of time before we stop speaking French in Montreal and that’s not what I want.”
The Coalition has proposed lowering the number of immigrants to the province to 40,000 a year from the current 50,000.
Legault’s proposal was panned by Liberal Leader Philippe Couillard, who accused his rival of fear-mongering and wanting to “break up families.”
He argued that Quebec’s immigration policy has been a success, noting that about 50 per cent of all jobs in recent years have been filled by immigrants.
“Immigrants are learning French, and you know where they learn it best? At work,” he said in Gatineau, near the Ontario border.
Couillard, who supports maintaining immigration at current levels, said he shares the views of younger Quebecers who are confident in the future and have little interest in what he called divisive language politics.
“We don’t want a situation where we fear our neighbour, our work colleague,” he said.
Conversely, the Coalition leader also faced an accusation his plan didn’t go far enough to protect the French language — this time by Parti Quebecois Leader Jean-François Lisée.
Lisee said the right number of immigrants was likely between 35,000 and 40,000 per year.