Montreal’s transit agency will be removing the word “Go” from its electronic displays when supporting local sports teams, to comply with Quebec’s language laws, and the move is raising eyebrows of even the most ardent defenders of the French language at the National Assembly.
As such, the popular phrase “Go Habs! Go!” will be substituted with its French equivalent “Allez Habs! Allez!“
In a statement, the Société de transport de Montréal (STM) says the decision follows a previous order from the province’s language watchdog, the Office québécois de la langue française (OQLF). It’s related to a complaint over the use of “Go! CF MTL Go!” in support of the local men’s soccer team on bus displays.
Though the word “Go” is a common sports expression, it’s an Anglicism.
The STM says it received the directive from the OQLF to modify its cheerful wording in the spring of 2024. It was only able to proceed at the end of that summer during its routine update of the destination signs across its fleet of 2,000 buses.
“Because the messages have to be changed manually in each vehicle, the process took several months before the change was made across the entire bus fleet,” said an STM spokesperson in a statement.
Ruba Ghazal, the Québec Solidaire co-spokesperson and a self-proclaimed “lover of the French language,” said “Go Habs! Go!” is Québécois, during a news conference gathering Quebec’s opposition parties Thursday morning.
“I don’t think that’s what’s threatening the French language, the ‘Go Habs, Go!'”
She said protecting the language involves rather measures like making sure new immigrants as well as CEOs from large companies learn French.
Catherine Gentilcore, the culture and communications critic for the Parti Québécois (PQ), echoed Ghazal, saying that her party has “bigger” priorities when it comes to the protection of the French language. She cited expanding Bill 101 to junior CEGEPs (junior colleges), improving francization efforts and strengthening culture and language programs in schools.
She said PQ Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon will not be deleting “Go Habs! Go!” from his vocabulary.
“We’ve been using ‘Go Habs! Go’ for a hundred years now. So I think ‘Allez Canadiens! Allez!’ is good it’s fine but ‘Go Habs! Go!,’ it’s fine too.”
Quebec Liberal Interim Leader Marc Tanguay, for his part, said that whoever was responsible for the decision at the OQLF could’ve done something else to help advance Quebec, pointing to cuts to French-language classes.
“It’s a waste of time, waste of money, waste of energy,” he said.
“It’s something positive that we have the Montreal Canadiens in the playoffs, can we just celebrate?”