Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says decline of French in Canada ‘extremely troubling’
CAP-AUX-MEULES, Que. — New census data showing a decline of French in Canada is “extremely troubling,” the prime minister said Friday, but he added that Ottawa still has a responsibility to protect linguistic minorities across the country — including in Quebec.
During a visit to Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine, Que., Trudeau reacted to data released this week indicating that the proportion of Canadians who speak mainly French at home has dropped in nearly all provinces and territories. In Quebec, the percentage of people who primarily speak French at home fell to 77.5 per cent in 2021 from 82.3 per cent 20 years earlier.
Trudeau said that while the data is shocking, “we could see this coming over the past number of years.”
“The numbers that recently came out … are extremely troubling and worrisome but not entirely a surprise,” Trudeau said in Cap-aux-Meules, Que., where he made an infrastructure announcement.


