Since his election as Conservative leader, Pierre Poilievre, who grew up in an English-speaking environment in Calgary, has claimed his French-speaking heritage on several occasions.
However, a data analysis carried out by The duty shows great inconsistency in the language he uses in the House of Commons, depending on the role he occupies there. After the defeat of the Conservative Party of Canada in 2015, its interventions in French before the House of Commons dropped radically.
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This text is published via our Perspectives section.
The proportion of his interventions in French increased constantly during his first years in Parliament, going from 11% to 17% between 2004 and 2011.
During the 41e legislature (2011-2015), a period during which he was Minister of Democratic Reform, then Minister of Employment and Social Development, Pierre Poilievre made up to a third (28%) of all his interventions in French.
His use of French dropped radically upon his return to the opposition, after the election of Justin Trudeau: less than 3% of his 1,192 interventions were made in the language of Molière between 2015 and 2019.
His use of French regained strength in the following years, as his ambitions to occupy the post of prime minister grew. Since the last federal election, in 2021, Poilievre has used French in approximately 20% of his interventions.
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