Bill 96: Protecting the French language | Unpublished
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This week's issue

Bill-96: Protecting the French language

Posted on 
June 7, 2021

Bill 96: Protecting the French language

Bill 96 is Quebec’s legislation which aims to make French the primary language of the province. Bill 96 would also declare Quebec ‘A Nation’—a move that would require opening up the Constitution. What could possibly go wrong?

Premier François Legault says the main reason for the need is the declining use of French in Quebec. Supporters of Bill 96 see it as essential because there is so much English in North America.

On the other side of the coin, is minority rights as anglophones in Quebec start to feel targeted. What has many concerned is Quebec’s plan to use the Notwithstanding clause to get what it wants. Constitutional law experts are at odds whether Quebec can unilaterally change the Constitution, which further muddies the water.

Our Unpublished.vote question last week asked:

Do you feel Bill 96 will violate the Canadian Constitution?

  • 91.3%—Yes
  • 5.5%—No
  • 3.3%—Unsure

If you haven’t already voted in this week’s poll question on this topic, you can still log-on and vote now at: http://unpublished.vote//issue/1123/bill-96-protecting-the-french-language#.YL4ZKNfO9GE.link

CATCH the show here (below) or on our facebook page: https://fb.watch/5_oSEydRzi/

Comment on this issue by publishing your opinion at: UnpublishedOttawa.com/getstarted!!


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Unpublished

Vote

Our Unpublished vote poll question...

Do you feel Quebec’s Bill-96 will violate the Constitution?

The results so far:

Yes =      
No =      
Unsure =      

If you haven’t voted yet, you can do so — VOTE HERE


Guests

Laywer and political strategist

 

 

Peter Biro, lawyer

Founder, Section 1

QCGN lawyer