Most Canadians consider speaking English, French key to national identity: Pew survey
WASHINGTON — Canadians are more likely than their U.S. counterparts to see language, customs and traditions as central to their national identity, a new survey suggests.
Some 84 per cent of respondents to the Pew Research Center poll released Thursday said speaking English or French is very or somewhat important to being Canadian, while only 15 per cent said the opposite.
In the U.S., however, only 78 per cent prioritized being able to speak English — the most common tongue in a country without an official language — while 21 per cent said it had little or no bearing on the American identity.
“Of the four dimensions of national identity included in the survey, language is by far the most valued,” Pew reported in its brief on the poll.