Elon Musk calls language laws in Canada ‘hypocritical and unfair’ after Air Canada controversy
- by montrealgazette
- Mar 30, 2026
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March 30, 2026 at 6:52 p.m.
As political leaders in Ottawa and Quebec welcomed the announced retirement of Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau, the fallout from his English-only video also drew international attention, including from one unexpected voice: Elon Musk.
The billionaire chief executive of Tesla and SpaceX, who in recent years has increasingly commented on political issues abroad — particularly over free speech and immigration — waded in, further amplifying a language debate all too familiar in Quebec.
Rousseau had spurred anger by delivering a nearly four-minute condolence video in English only following last week’s crash at LaGuardia Airport in New York, when an Air Canada Express flight from Montreal collided with an airport fire truck while landing. Capt. Antoine Forest and First Officer Mackenzie Gunther were killed, and more than 40 people were injured. Forest, 30, was a francophone Quebecer.
As the investigation into the crash got under way in New York, days of backlash followed for Rousseau in Canada. Prime Minister Mark Carney said it showed “a lack of compassion.” Quebec Premier François Legault said outright Rousseau should resign — Quebec’s National Assembly ultimately voted 92-0 (with one abstention) in favour of a motion calling for his resignation.
In response to a post Monday about the Air Canada chief’s retirement, Musk wrote: “That’s crazy.”
“There are many one-sided laws in Canada that mandate French at the expense of English,” Musk wrote, adding: “Extremely hypocritical and unfair!”
Before Musk, who was born in South Africa, settled in the U.S., he briefly emigrated to Canada in the late 1980s, reportedly arriving in Montreal. His mother, Maye, was born in Canada.
Attached to Musk’s post on Monday was linked query on Grok, the AI chatbot integrated into X, which Musk acquired in 2022, asking it to list French-language mandates in Canada and “how this is hypocritical compared to no English mandate laws.”
Grok’s lengthy response pointed to Quebec’s Bill 96, requiring French in areas ranging from government services and workplace communications to signage, education and consumer contracts.
It also referenced newer federal rules extending French-language rights in federally regulated businesses operating in Quebec.
The expansion of language laws in Quebec has been driven by Premier François Legault’s government, which has cited stronger language rules to protect French in the province.
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