Even though revised census figures show the number of mother-tongue Enlish-speakers in Quebec is declining, a leading Anglo advocacy group has found a sliver of good news in the updated numbers.
Anglophones have a right to their own institutions not just because of a need for access to services in their own language, but to ensure that the group continues to be heard, and can act as a ...
In presenting a constitution for Quebec last week, Premier François Legault attempted to reassure anglophones this latest effort to affirm a distinct identity, protect the French language, culture and ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. François Legault's tenure as premier of Quebec and leader of the Coalition Avenir Québec was marked by major overhauls to province ...
The protest is small but agitated. A few dozen opponents of Quebec’s proposed language law are gathered in a park in the traditionally anglophone neighbourhood of Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, and the speakers ...
In his last piece before retirement, the veteran Montreal Gazette columnist Don Macpherson warned his English-speaking readers they were on their own. Simply put, “we don’t count,” he told them. No ...
MONTREAL - The Quebec government has clarified that anglophones have the right to receive health and social services in English in a new directive meant to allay concerns the province was trying to ...
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