That is in your link
Population: 7,598,800 (2005 est.)
Official language: French
Majority group: francophone (82.0%)
Minority groups: anglophone (7.9%), allophone (9%), Aboriginals (1%), bilingual
Political status: province of the Canadian federation since 1867
are you guys dumb or what??you don't even check your own links, and i am not even canadian, and i know more than you all combined together about your own country.
Dumb? Hmmm, judging by your grammer it looks like you are the one with special needs. It also appears as though you did not read the entire link.
Here is part of the info that I extracted from the link above...
On the island of Montreal, the francophone majority drops to 52.8% by 2005, a net decline since the 1970s owing to francophone outmigration to more affluent suburbs in Laval and the South Shore (fr. Rive-Sud). The anglophones account for 21% of the population and the allophones 36%.
The remaining 10%, named allophones in Quebec, comprises some 30 different linguistic/ethnic groupings. With the exception of Aboriginal peoples in Quebec (the Inuit, Huron, etc.), the majority are products of 20th century immigration. There are 6.3% Italians, 2.9% Spanish speakers, 2.5% Arabic speakers, 1.7% Chinese, 1.5% Greeks, 1.4% French Creoles, 1.1% Portuguese, 0.9% Vietnamese, 0.8% Polish, and so on.