Most communities across the country will host organized celebrations for Canada Day, usually outdoor public events, such as parades, carnivals, festivals, barbecues, air and maritime shows, fireworks, and free musical concerts,
[14] as well as
citizenship ceremonies for new citizens.
[15][16] There is no standard mode of celebration for Canada Day;
Jennifer Welsh, a professor of International Relations at the University of Oxford, said about this: "Canada Day, like the country, is endlessly decentralized. There doesn't seem to be a central recipe for how to celebrate it—chalk it up to the nature of the federation."
[17] However, the locus of the celebrations is the national capital,
Ottawa, Ontario, where large concerts and cultural displays are held on
Parliament Hill, with the
governor general and
prime minister typically officiating, though
the monarch or another member of the
Royal Family may also attend or take the governor general's place.
[n 2] Smaller events are mounted in other parks around the city and in Gatineau, Quebec.
Given the federal nature of the holiday, celebrating Canada Day can be a cause of friction in the province of
Quebec, where the holiday is overshadowed by Quebec's
National Holiday, on June 24.
[23] For example, the federal government funds Canada Day events at the
Old Port of Montreal—an area run by a federal
Crown corporation—while the National Holiday parade is a
grassroots effort that has been met with pressure to cease, even from federal officials.
[24] The nature of the event has also been met with criticism outside of Quebec, such as that given by
Ottawa Citizen columnist David Warren, who said in 2007: "The Canada of the government-funded paper flag-waving and painted faces—the 'new' Canada that is celebrated each year on what is now called 'Canada Day'—has nothing controversially Canadian about it. You could wave a different flag, and choose another face paint, and nothing would be lost."
[25]
Canada Day also coincides with Quebec's
Moving Day, when many fixed-lease apartment rental terms expire. The bill changing the province's moving day from May 1 to July 1 was introduced by a federalist member of the
Quebec National Assembly,
Jérôme Choquette in 1973,
[26] in order not to affect children still in school in the month of May.
[27]
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