
THE AMERICA ONE NEWS

Feb 25, 2025 |
0
| Remer,MNSponsor: QWIKET AI
Sponsor: QWIKET AI
Sponsor: QWIKET AI: Sports Knowledge
Sponsor: QWIKET AI: Interactive Sports Knowledge.
Sponsor: QWIKET AI: Interactive Sports Knowledge and Reasoning Support.
topic

As a bilingual native Quebecer, I always dread French political debates where no one speaks the language fluently. But one must make these things tolerable, so Monday night, 8 p.m., my daughter and I settled in to play “Judge the French” at the Liberal leadership debate, which was also the only way to convince an apolitical teenager to watch. The verdict? Frank Baylis’ French was good, Karina Gould’s and Chrystia Freeland’s was fine, and Mark Carney’s was not. It was better in the press conference that followed, but during the main event, Carney tripped up, most notably when he said, “we agree with Hamas,” instead of “we agree about Hamas,” to the delight of Conservatives all over social media.