Thank you for your question.
As I mentioned in my speech, the bilingual nature of the event is very important. Each federal event is supposed to be held in both languages. That is the bottom line. Take an English-speaking municipality as an example. There is the difference I was talking about. Where I live, there are no French-speaking communities. So we are not going to be telling English-speakers to include French in their speeches. But there are people like me, anglophones in those communities and from all over Canada, people from the English-speaking communities in Quebec, people from the French-speaking majority in Quebec, who support bilingualism and linguistic duality. They could all declare themselves to be in favour of bilingualism whether their communities have anglophone majorities or francophone majorities.
What does it bring? How does it work? Why is it important? What does it bring to our culture, our lives, the people we are?
That is how I see bilingualism and linguistic duality being included in the event. It has to be promoted with the majorities.
Have I answered your question?