Bonner: Repairing the fray: Improving immigration and citizenship policy in Canada
2025/05/28 Leave a comment
Hard to understand why a former staffer with exposure to immigration issues, could advance such naive, politically and in some cases, judicially unrealistic proposals in response to some of the legitimate policy concerns and failures that he points out.
Some examples. Government reorganization into a super ministry would result in significant transition processes and distract from substantive issues. Would any international campaign focussed on values discourage those with other values? No country has had success with pro-birth strategies. Differential time requirements for citizenship would be Charter non-compliant:
….Immigration has been a good thing in the past. It should be in the present and future, too.
This study has three main parts: (1) an exposition of the economic and cultural challenges of mass immigration (including a short history of immigration policy in Canada), (2) a comparative analysis of other immigration systems that we can learn from, and (3) a series of policy options for improving the Canadian system.
To repair Canada’s frayed immigration system, this study makes the case for the following recommendations:
1. Lower the annual permanent residency target to a more manageable level (e.g. 200,000).
2. Strengthen the process of deportation for any non-citizen found guilty of violent crime, supporting terrorism, or expressing hatred for Canada.
3. Execute an international campaign to discourage immigration by anyone unwilling or unable to respect our founding cultures and unwilling or unable to integrate.
4. Prioritize international students pursuing courses of study of high importance to our labour market and supply chains.
5. Re-engineer the points system to emphasize language, age, and domestic education.
6. Consolidate all “population” ministries to create the Ministry of Human Resources Canada (MHRC).
7. Make the main mandate of MHRC to ensure that economic immigration serves the national interest.
8. Require MHRC to implement a pro-birth strategy.
9. Lengthen the time requirement for citizenship, except for immigrants from peer English- and French-speaking countries.
10. Phase down and abolish the Temporary Foreign Worker Program permanently.
11. Establish a uniform standard of credential recognition in self-regulating professions and skilled trades.
We have the right and the obligation to raise the value of Canadian citizenship, and to demand more of our citizens. Above all, however, efforts at integration should proceed not from a dislike of other places, but from a love for Canada….
Source: Repairing the fray: Improving immigration and citizenship policy in Canada
