Ontario Francophone services debate sees return of 'anti-French, anti-minority' groups
The controversy over Francophone services in Ontario is re-igniting a debate over bilingualism that's been dormant for a decade or more.
"This has become a national issue," University of Guelph historian Matthew Hayday says of the furor over the scrapping of a French-only university and changes to the French language commissioner.
"This is not just a minor tiff in the province of Ontario."
Hayday studies the history of language politics in Canada and is the author of So They Want Us to Learn French: Promoting and Opposing Bilingualism in English-Speaking Canada.
These largely administrative changes by the Ontario government come amidst what Hayday calls a "perfect storm" that includes the rise of anti-bilingualism politicians in New Brunswick, media commentators dismissing Francophone communities outside Quebec and the global shift toward anti-minority populist politics.
Hayday says he's also seeing the return of anti-bilingualism groups, using some of the same arguments from the 1980s and 1990s, chief among them that French services are too expensive for taxpayers.
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"This is an argument that's been used for a long time. That somehow the economic costs of bilingualism outweigh the benefits," says Hayday.
"You know if you dig slightly below the surface, you can see anti-French, anti-minority sentiments underpinning them."
One of the groups Hayday mentions is Canadians for Language Fairness.
But spokesperson Jean-Serge Brisson says they are not prejudiced against any particular linguistic group, just concerned about how "the push for bilingualism has gone further than serving the public."
He says Franco-Ontarians have been "suckered by their emotions" in choosing to protest the Ontario government's recent moves.
"It's a tempest in a teapot. It has nothing to do with culture, it has everything to do with a government wanting to be efficient," says Brisson.
"There are things that are more important than culture. Like a job."