Quebec government bans gender-neutral pronouns in official state documents
MONTREAL — The Quebec government is banning the use of recently invented gender-neutral words in all official communications, in what it says is an attempt to protect the integrity of the French language.
The updated language policy applies to new words including gender-neutral pronouns that are commonly used by transgender and non-binary people. French-language Minister Jean-François Roberge said Wednesday that “more and more” public bodies have been using such words, which is causing confusion.
“It’s as if everyone had their own grammar,” he told reporters. “It doesn’t make sense.”
Roberge insisted the move is about ensuring clarity, not an attack on trans rights. “I don’t want to exclude anybody. We are open-minded. We want people to be happy,” he said. The province says non-binary people will still be able to use the gender marker X on certain government documents.
