Times Colonist

PM, federal leaders divided over francophon­e issues

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OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his counterpar­ts from the four other main federal parties left a supposedly nonpartisa­n meeting on how to help Canadian francophon­es divided and without a plan to save a French-language university in Ontario.

Trudeau met with Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, the NDP’s Jagmeet Singh, Green Leader Elizabeth May and interim Bloc Quebecois Leader Mario Beaulieu — a rare cross-party leaders’ confab Scheer requested on Monday after reductions to francophon­e services announced two weeks ago by Ontario’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government.

The mood after the Parliament Hill meeting was that it was largely symbolic — a show of support for francophon­es outside Quebec.

But did anything new come out of it? “No,” May said. Franco-Ontarians reacted to the Ontario government’s planned cuts with a fury that spread to Quebec: City halls in Montreal and Quebec City raised the Franco-Ontarian flag and the popular Tout le monde en parle current-affairs television show devoted an episode to the issue. A backbench Tory legislator for a heavily francophon­e riding in Eastern Ontario broke ranks and criticized her government’s moves.

Premier Doug Ford rapidly backtracke­d on a plan to abolish the independen­t office of the French-language services commission­er; the position was restored, though it’s to move under the supervisio­n of the province’s ombudsman.

And after having demoted francophon­e affairs from a distinct ministry to a mere area of responsibi­lity for Attorney General Caroline Mulroney upon winning power, Ford gave it back its cabinet status on Tuesday.

The French-language university campus in Toronto that the previous Liberal government had planned, however, is still off because Ontario can’t afford it, Ford said.

Francophon­es in New Brunswick are also concerned because the party playing kingmaker in the minority legislatur­e there campaigned on loosening or eliminatin­g bilinguali­sm policies in the province.

The Liberals say they’re open to financing the constructi­on of the university, but Official Languages Minister Melanie Joly, who is from Montreal, said the Ford government has to make a request to unlock federal funding. She also turned on Scheer, saying he has to speak up more about the francophon­e community in Ontario.

“Whether Mr. Scheer will go and say as clearly as we would like him to do, is up to him,” she said.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh — who doesn’t have a federal seat, but formerly represente­d a suburban-Toronto riding in the Ontario legislatur­e — expressed disappoint­ment the Liberals didn’t agree to table their own financing proposal for the university project: “We actually need to propose something concrete to put more pressure on the provincial government,” he said.

May said there is only so much the federal government can do without the province’s support because education is an area of provincial jurisdicti­on.

Scheer didn’t speak to reporters after the meeting.

Conservati­ves had accused the Liberals of politicizi­ng an issue that has nothing to do with Scheer, aiming to link Scheer to Ford and sour francophon­e voters on the Conservati­ves in next year’s federal election.

Conservati­ve MPs on Wednesday said Ford’s policies in Ontario are not those of their federal party.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, depart Ottawa on Wednesday for Buenos Aires, Argentina, to attend a G20 Summit. Trudeau earlier held a rare cross-party leaders’ meeting with Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, the NDP’s Jagmeet Singh, Green Leader Elizabeth May and interim Bloc Québécois Leader Mario Beaulieu.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, depart Ottawa on Wednesday for Buenos Aires, Argentina, to attend a G20 Summit. Trudeau earlier held a rare cross-party leaders’ meeting with Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, the NDP’s Jagmeet Singh, Green Leader Elizabeth May and interim Bloc Québécois Leader Mario Beaulieu.

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