Quebec strikes French-language deal with English universities after years of tension
MONTREAL — The Quebec government says it has reached a new partnership with the province’s English-language universities aimed at increasing the percentage of out-of-province students who graduate with a functional knowledge of French.
Announced Tuesday, the eight-year deal will provide a total of up to $20 million in provincial financing to Quebec’s three English universities — McGill and Concordia in Montreal and Bishop’s in Sherbrooke, Que.
In return, 60 per cent of out-of-province undergraduate students who start their first year in the fall of 2026 are expected to graduate with a Level 4 in Quebec’s scale of French proficiency — being able to communicate in French in everyday situations using functional vocabulary.
The deal follows years of tensions between the Quebec government and its English universities during which the province hiked tuition for out-of-province students as a way to protect the French language by reducing the number of English-speakers in Montreal. As well, Quebec had wanted 80 per cent of out-of-province students in English universities to have an intermediate level of spoken French before they could graduate.











