Smith, Poilievre praise independent media at Juno News’ Stampede event

Interesting that Poilievre continues to believe he needs outlets like Juno and not just the more mainstream right-leaning Postmedia publications. Maybe independent financially but not in terms of its articles and slants:

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith praised the rapid growth of independent media at Juno News’ opening reception for the Calgary Stampede on Friday.

Juno News co-founder Keean Bexte delivered brief opening remarks at the reception.

Bexte thanked the crowd for attending the gathering and opened his remarks by celebrating Juno News’ rapid growth, becoming Canada’s most popular independent media platform in a span of four and a half months.

“We sent an invitation to all the leaders of the federal parties. We are so honoured to have Pierre Poilievre, the leader of Canada’s official opposition, and Premier Danielle Smith today,” who were the only two leaders willing to engage at the event.

Pierre Poilievre joked that the CBC event conflicted with the Juno News Stampede opener and told supporters that he “lost his CBC invitation in the mail somewhere.”

He praised Juno News’ fast growth, saying that it is “faster growing” than the CBC and “does it without any tax dollars.”

He described the platform as a “risk that is paying off because frankly, people want to have an independent voice, not what the government wants them to think.”

Poilievre praised Smith’s leadership and reaffirmed their shared defence of “freedom and common sense.”

“I’m joined by the wonderful premier of Alberta, who’s fighting for freedom and common sense, the great Danielle Smith,” Poilievre said to applause.

During her remarks, Smith expressed her optimism for the future of federal politics.

“With Pierre back in the House of Commons we are going to get some action, looking forward to seeing Pierre back in there very, very soon.”

Smith also complimented Juno News’ independence and growth: “When I was in mainstream media I always used to say if there is something interesting in independent media but until I see it in mainstream media, I can’t trust it’s true. Now it’s the reverse; now it’s when I see something in mainstream media I don’t trust it’s true until I read it in independent media like Juno News.”

She further expanded on her view of the changing media landscape: “I think that shows how much independent media is responding to the needs of the public and giving a voice to those of us in the Conservative movement, who find ourselves shut out by the mainstream media.”

Smith closed her remarks by welcoming festivalgoers to the 10-day celebration.

“Have a fantastic Stampede,” said Smith.

“Make sure you pace yourself,” she said, “because you’ve got 10 days to go, and then you’ll understand how we party. If you’re not from here, you will understand how we party better than anyone in the country, so enjoy.”

The Stampede is often a political pilgrimage for federal and provincial leaders across the country, but this year’s edition takes place as Poilievre relocates to an Alberta riding, and while Smith’s United Conservative Party holds firm control of Alberta.

The reception on Friday was warm and upbeat, with crowds gathered for pancakes, parades, and selfies with Canadian politicians, including Prime Minister Mark Carney, who received a cold reception from a crowd of thousands.

Smith and Poilievre are expected to appear at additional events throughout Stampede weekend.

Source: Smith, Poilievre praise independent media at Juno News’ Stampede event

Immigrants to Canada have long found their qualifications questioned and careers crushed. Things were supposed to have changed — but barriers persist

Perennial issue that has been raised for years. I always found the federal initiatives were more talk than action, given the regulatory bodies are all provincial.

One can only hope that the work underway to reduce barriers to internal trade includes mutual recognition within Canada among provincial bodies and that governments at both the political and official level also consider reducing the impact on those with foreign equivalent certification:

….The result is a system that still underutilizes skilled immigrants, leaving many in precarious work — despite critical labour shortages and an aging population — and is estimated to cost Canada $50 billion in lost GDP each year.

“Are we actually recognizing foreign credentials better? Not really,” said Rupa Banerjee, associate professor at Toronto Metropolitan University and Canada Research Chair of economic inclusion, employment and entrepreneurship of Canada’s immigrants.

Rather than addressing barriers newcomers face that prevent them from applying their existing qualifications, “we’ve circumvented this issue of foreign credentials as much as possible by really prioritizing people with Canadian education and experience.”

There is no “convincing evidence that credential recognition has gotten demonstrably better” said Tricia Williams, director of research at the Future Skills Centre.

“For every example of a regulated profession that’s gotten better, there’s others that have stayed the same.”…

Source: Immigrants to Canada have long found their qualifications questioned and careers crushed. Things were supposed to have changed — but barriers persist

Québec révise ses critères de résidence permanente pour les immigrants économiques

A noter:

Il est de nouveau possible, depuis cette semaine, d’emprunter une des principales voies d’accès vers l’immigration permanente au Québec. Et le gouvernement Legault a fixé de nouveaux critères de sélection mercredi.

Comme annoncé le mois dernier par le ministre de l’Immigration, de la Francisation et de l’Intégration du Québec, Jean-François Roberge, le Programme de sélection des travailleurs qualifiés du Québec (PSTQ) est rouvert. Dès ce mois-ci, Québec transmettra de nouveau des invitations à présenter une demande de sélection permanente par le biais de ce canal, la principale porte d’entrée pour l’immigration économique au Québec.

Suspendu depuis l’automne dernier, le PSTQ a été revu de fond en comble par le ministre Roberge le printemps dernier. Il en a publié les critères et le système de pointage dans la Gazette officielle du Québec mercredi.

Les travailleurs déjà installés avantagés

Comme il l’avait affirmé précédemment, le gouvernement priorisera les profils d’immigrants déjà établis au Québec dans sa sélection des futurs résidents permanents québécois. Une personne qui a travaillé plus de 48 mois au Québec obtiendra 160 points, le maximum atteignable, alors qu’une personne qui travaille en territoire québécois depuis moins d’un an n’en obtiendra aucun.

Auparavant, un immigrant commençait à accumuler des points après six mois de travail en territoire québécois. Le total maximal de points, accordé à ceux qui avaient occupé un emploi au Québec sur une durée d’au moins quatre ans, était de 100.

Avec ce nouveau système, le gouvernement de François Legault souhaite favoriser l’accession au statut de résident permanent de davantage de travailleurs déjà installés au Québec.

Ceux qui parlent français et qui habitent à l’extérieur du territoire de la Communauté métropolitaine de Montréal auront aussi de meilleures chances d’être sélectionnés.

Un ressortissant étranger pourra en effet se voir accorder jusqu’à 200 points selon sa compréhension et sa production écrites et orales en français. S’il choisit d’immigrer avec un époux ou un conjoint de fait, ce dernier pourra contribuer au pointage, qui sera toutefois de 160 au maximum. Une compréhension du français de niveau 1 à 4, sur 12 paliers, ne produira aucun point.

Les personnes immigrantes ayant séjourné, travaillé ou étudié à l’extérieur de Montréal toucheront également des points supplémentaires, selon la durée de leur implication.

Comme c’était le cas auparavant, les personnes plus jeunes se verront récompensées avec un pointage plus élevé (100 points ou plus pour les moins de 33 ans). Celles qui ont un diplôme universitaire également, et d’autant plus s’il a été obtenu au Québec (200 points pour un diplôme universitaire québécois de troisième cycle).

Ni PEQ ni parrainage collectif

Toute personne souhaitant accéder à la résidence permanente par le biais du PSTQ doit déposer une « déclaration d’intérêt » à travers le système d’immigration Arrima. Une fois reçue, celle-ci est classée selon le système de pointage en vigueur.

À l’heure actuelle, le PSTQ est une des rares portes d’entrée accessibles vers l’immigration permanente.

Le Programme de l’expérience québécoise (PEQ), qui vise lui aussi à accélérer l’accession de diplômés et de travailleurs temporaires à un statut permanent, fait l’objet d’un moratoire. Il est donc impossible de déposer de nouvelles demandes. Même chose pour le programme de parrainage collectif.

Jean-François Roberge affirme que ces gels permettront « de respecter les cibles de sélection prévues au plan d’immigration du Québec pour 2025 ».

Après avoir accueilli autour de 67 000 immigrants permanents en 2025 (soit le seuil attendu), le gouvernement souhaite réduire radicalement ses cibles en 2026. Cet automne, il soumettra à la consultation des scénarios de cibles à 25 000, 35 000 et 45 000 nouveaux arrivants permanents.

Source: Québec révise ses critères de résidence permanente pour les immigrants économiques

It is again possible, since this week, to use one of the main access routes to permanent immigration in Quebec. And the Legault government set new selection criteria on Wednesday.

As announced last month by Quebec’s Minister of Immigration, Francisation and Integration, Jean-François Roberge, the Quebec Skilled Worker Selection Program (QPS) is reopening. Starting this month, Quebec will again send invitations to apply for permanent selection through this channel, the main gateway for economic immigration to Quebec.

Suspended since last fall, the PSTQ was thoroughly reviewed by Minister Roberge last spring. He published the criteria and the score system in the Gazette officielle du Québec on Wednesday.

Already installed workers at an advantage

As stated earlier, the government will prioritize immigrant profiles already established in Quebec in its selection of future Quebec permanent residents. A person who has worked more than 48 months in Quebec will get 160 points, the maximum attainable, while a person who has worked in Quebec territory for less than a year will not get any.

Previously, an immigrant began to accumulate points after six months of work in Quebec territory. The maximum total of points, granted to those who had held a job in Quebec for a period of at least four years, was 100.

With this new system, the government of François Legault wishes to promote the access to permanent resident status of more workers already settled in Quebec.

Those who speak French and who live outside the territory of the Communauté métropolitaine de Montréal will also have a better chance of being selected.

A foreign national may indeed be awarded up to 200 points according to his written and oral understanding and production in French. If he chooses to immigrate with a spouse or common-law partner, the latter may contribute to the score, which will however be a maximum of 160. An understanding of French from level 1 to 4, on 12 levels, will not produce any points.

Immigrants who have stayed, worked or studied outside of Montreal will also receive additional points, depending on the duration of their involvement.

As was the case before, younger people will be rewarded with a higher score (100 points or more for those under 33). Those who also have a university degree, and even more so if it was obtained in Quebec (200 points for a Quebec postgraduate university degree).

Neither PEQ nor collective sponsorship

Anyone wishing to access permanent residence through the PSTQ must file a “declaration of interest” through the Arrima immigration system. Once received, it is classified according to the current pointing system.

Currently, the PSTQ is one of the few accessible gateways to permanent immigration.

The Quebec Experience Program (QEP), which also aims to accelerate the access of graduates and temporary workers to permanent status, is subject to a moratorium. It is therefore impossible to submit new applications. Same thing for the collective sponsorship program.

Jean-François Roberge says that these freezes will make it possible to “meet the selection targets set out in Quebec’s immigration plan for 2025”.

After welcoming around 67,000 permanent immigrants in 2025 (the expected threshold), the government wants to radically reduce its targets in 2026. This fall, it will submit target scenarios to 25,000, 35,000 and 45,000 permanent newcomers for consultation.

Mahboubi: Why have a target for cutting temporary immigration if Canada can’t meet it?

Hard not to agree:

…But any reductions should not come at any cost. Asylum reform must ensure that the system serves those in genuine need of protection, rather than as an alternative pathway to permanent residency or prolonged stay. 

Likewise, while the student permit cap has curbed numbers, it has hurt the entire postsecondary sector. A larger cap is not the answer; what’s needed is a shift in focus toward attracting high-quality applicants and supporting sectors that benefit most from temporary residents. The goal should not be just about quantity, but also about the quality of entrants and their alignment with long-term national objectives.

What’s needed now is a more credible and co-ordinated approach – one that combines realistic targets, reliable data systems, effective enforcement and reforms to the asylum system in a way that balances efficiency with fairness. It also means being honest about what can reasonably be achieved in the short-term, and recognizing that Canada’s growing reliance on temporary residents is not just a numbers problem, but a structural one.

Until then, pressures associated with Canada’s large temporary population will continue to build, and the 5-per-cent target will remain more aspirational than achievable.

Source: Why have a target for cutting temporary immigration if Canada can’t meet it?

Kweku: This Is the Birthright Reckoning That America Needs

Good long and informative read:

…Every country has its myths, its memory and a set of ideals that shape its terms of belonging. But these abstractions have particular salience in the Americas where, as the political scientist Benedict Anderson observed, national identity was a more deliberate act of invention: Unlike Europe, where nations imagined themselves as ancient, awakening to an identity traced to an ancestral past, those in the New World thought of themselves as being newly born. This is perhaps nowhere more true than in the United States.

These ideas may feel far removed from the practical concerns of politics. After all, it’s not clear what bearing they have on what the tax rate should be or how to fund Medicaid. But national identity matters because it is a precondition for us to make decisions together, especially the hard ones that may require sacrifice. Our self-conception has always been a contested one, the product of conflict rather than consensus. And in the present moment, it feels as if Americans are deciding, once again, what kind of nation we will be.

Sixty years after the beginning of the third wave of immigration to these shores, nativist sentiment is rising and the country threatens to narrow American identity. We have been here before, and one way of reading American history is as an ongoing war between progress and reaction — each worldview attempting to confront and defeat the other. But our history suggests that the relationship between exclusion and inclusion is messier and more complicated than that. It also suggests a way out of our present crisis without losing our country’s soul.

In his second term, President Trump has sought to use every tool at his disposal, both legitimate and illegitimate, to fundamentally reorder what it means to be an American. His administration has terminated temporary protections for many migrants, sharply stepped up immigration arrests, increased the rate of asylum denials and invoked a wartime law and unconventional accords to deport migrants. It has also claimed wide latitude to cancel visas and schedule those who held them for deportation based on their political views. Perhaps most jarringly, the administration has sought to use executive power to limit birthright citizenship, denying it to those whose parents were in the United States temporarily or illegally. Last Friday, the Trump administration won a procedural victory on that front when the Supreme Court limited the ability of lower court judges to block the policy nationwide.

Unrestricted birthright citizenship — the characteristically New World notion that being born on a country’s soil is enough to make a person its inheritor and steward — represents American identity at its fullest and most audacious. It reflects a belief that the nation can enfranchise and enlist anyone in our grand experiment of self-governance.

But like the rest of America’s immigration policy, the expansiveness of birthright citizenship belies its origins. It was enshrined in the 14th Amendment as a legal solution to the moral contradiction that resulted from adopting and then abolishing chattel slavery. Emancipation created within our borders a whole people from what just a moment before had been regarded by our laws as property. Who were they to us? We amended the Constitution to decide: By virtue of being born in America, they were fellow citizens; the same would hold true for all who would be born here thereafter.

So just as it is hard to imagine that America would have welcomed immigrants so freely had it been founded in an unpopulated wilderness, it is also difficult to imagine that the country would have enshrined unconditional birthright citizenship in the Constitution had all the people who worked its fields been free.

The provision of birthright citizenship also requires us to answer a difficult question: What should bind together people who inherited citizenship from their parents, those who were naturalized into citizenship by a promise and those who received it by virtue of being born on this nation’s soil?

The second great wave of American immigration peaked in 1907, and by 1910, nearly 15 percent of residents were newcomers. Add in the children they had within our borders, and at the turn of the 20th century, immigrant stock — those within a generation of arriving — made up about one-third of America’s population. The weaving of these lives into the national fabric is one of the most important and transformational achievements in our country’s history.

Legend recalls this process as automatic and inevitable, a natural effect of people living near one another, learning from and marrying into one another’s cultures and being pressed into cooperation by simple daily necessity.

These processes did all play a part, but they don’t tell the whole story. The hammering together of an American people out of this European diaspora was seen at the time as an urgent national project. Civic society, business and the government all mobilized to inculcate American culture, language and values. The Y.M.C.A. organized English classes for immigrants. Settlement houses helped them find jobs and enroll their children in schools. The Ford Motor Company held compulsory classes that taught immigrant employees American civics and values. At a pageant, the graduates, dressed in their ethnic garb, would walk into what looked like an enormous melting pot, which their instructors were stirring with oversized ladles, and then walk out waving American flags. The project’s most powerful force was the rapidly expanding public school system, an incubator for national identity in the children of immigrants and natives alike.

We tend to remember this as a uniform effort. In reality, many different agendas were at work, some that sought to protect immigrants from the hardships of life in this country, others that claimed to be protecting this country from the hardship of immigration.

The popular memory of the second wave also tends to understate the extent to which immigrants resisted the campaign to make them Americans. Often clustered together in ethnic enclaves, they created a network of foreign language newspapers, parochial schools and clubs, in part out of necessity, but also in part to preserve their distinctiveness. As the great immigration historian Oscar Handlin documented, many immigrants resented the institutions bent on “improving” them as dehumanizing and patronizing. And the policies of Americanization were not always gentle ones. Laws were passed mandating compulsory school attendance, in part to separate children from the culture of their immigrant parents. Prohibitions against teaching in foreign languages — particularly German — had the same goal.

It’s not surprising, then, that by the 1920s the paternalism of Americanization had fully curdled into an outright nativist, racist and anti-immigrant movement. Ford abandoned the melting pot pageants and started distributing antisemitic propaganda at its dealerships. Representative Charles Stengle of New York argued that the project of Americanization was failing because unlike earlier immigrants, the new arrivals were incapable of assimilation: “The fire has apparently gone out under the melting pot and the original American stock is not absorbing these insoluble elements.” 

Representative John Tillman of Arkansas condemned these insoluble masses as having corrupted America: “We have admitted the dregs of Europe until America has been Orientalized, Europeanized, Africanized, and mongrelized to that insidious degree that our genius, stability and greatness, and promise of advancement and achievement, are actually menaced.”

This movement eventually led to the passage of the Immigration Act of 1924, which slashed immigration overall and instituted nation-by-nation quotas that were based on America’s demographics in 1890 — strongly favoring the fair-skinned, Protestant residents of Western and Northern Europe. In an opinion piece in this newspaper, headlined “America of the Melting Pot Comes to End,” Senator David A. Reed of Pennsylvania, one of the sponsors of the bill, announced that the country would no longer indulge the idea that immigrants could be “fused by the ‘melting pot’ into a distinctive American type.” But it was not the end of the melting pot. It was the beginning.

As historians and economists have argued, the long years of low immigration that followed the act eased white interethnic tensions, clearing the way for the emergence of unhyphenated American identity. Institutions like parochial schools, established as bulwarks against assimilation, often became engines of it. Ethnic enclaves shrank as their upwardly mobile children moved elsewhere and few new arrivals came to replace them. But the immigrants of the second wave didn’t just blend in to an American mainstream, as some nativists had hoped. They enriched it. The 1924 law, motivated by the idea that those immigrants could not become a part of the American fabric, ended up knitting them more tightly into it. The resulting common culture was the ground from which the New Deal consensus could emerge. The solidarity forged in World War II completed the consolidation of this new America.

In 1958, Senator John F. Kennedy looked back on the nation’s history, marked with extermination, exclusion and suppression — more than three decades into an era of restrictive immigration policy — and called America a “nation of immigrants.” It was in this America that it was possible to win the formal extension of America’s promises — first to Black Americans, with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and then to nonwhite immigrants, with the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965. America’s most capacious ideal was expanded, then, partially as a product of the nativism that feared it.

In the aftermath of a war against fascism, the racist eugenicism of the 1924 act was an embarrassing echo of the enemy America had helped defeat; in an ideological struggle against Communism, it was a liability. The 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act dropped the country quotas that favored Western and Northern Europeans and made it easier for U.S. citizens to bring their relatives from abroad. The act inaugurated America’s third great wave of immigration, which was drawn heavily from nonwhite countries such as Mexico and China. As some of its skeptics correctly anticipated, the bill reshaped the country’s demographics.

Today, America is home to more immigrants than any other country. In fact, there are more immigrants here than in the next four leading countries combined. In 2024, the United States accounted for 4 percent of the world’s population, but 17 percent of all international migrants lived here, a portion of whom were undocumented. And the fraction of America’s population that is foreign born is once again about 15 percent. Just as it did 115 years ago, this inspires anxieties about American identity. At the core of Mr. Trump’s “Make America Great Again” is a nostalgia for the America that existed before the law was passed. And to many of his followers, this nostalgia promotes a belief not just in the superiority of American culture — a polyglot, provisional culture nevertheless grounded in that of the Anglo Protestant founders — but in the idea that only certain kinds of people, from certain kinds of traditions or nations, can adopt this culture. In this vision, America is not a creed at all. It’s a lineage.

This idea has once again risen in prominence on the right, and is exemplified by the growing political prominence of the term “Heritage American,” meant to denote those who can trace their roots here back several generations. Some conservatives use the phrase to imply that a person’s Americanness is strengthened by the tenure of their ancestors. Other people use it to launder white nationalism with facially neutral language. Either way, in this reckoning, the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act brought on what now feels like an identity crisis.

Like the immigrants of the now century-old second wave, those of the third great wave are brave, enterprising and industrious, almost by definition, having overcome tremendous obstacles for a chance to be Americans.

This is one reason that, as the economists Ran Abramitzky and Leah Boustan have demonstrated, despite sharp differences among their origins, third-wave immigrants and their descendants move up the economic ladder at a rate similar to those of the second wave. And though debates over immigration are often framed in terms of a zero-sum competition between immigrants and native workers, there’s little evidence that immigrants are economically hurting natives in the long run.

Contemporary nativists often suggest that while the European immigrants of the late 19th and early 20th centuries were able to become Americans, the post-1965 generation of largely nonwhite immigrants is too culturally different to do so. Of course, these are precisely the same arguments that nativists made about those European immigrants when comparing them to those that had preceded them. The nativists are equally incorrect this time around.

But it is true that replicating the binding together of the nation faces new challenges. For instance: A loose collection of Europeans turned themselves into white Americans in part by defining themselves against those who were not, especially Black Americans. Can we arrive at an American “we” without a “them” to marginalize?

And integration into America doesn’t work the same way it once did. The global dominance of American culture and commerce has made it easier than ever for immigrants to acculturate. Even before they arrive, they can watch us hash out our values on X, learn our jokes and dance moves from TikTok and read our newspapers online. They can even shop our latest clothing trends. But that same world has removed some of the pressures that encourage them to do so. Thanks to the internet and social media, immigrants can make it in America without entirely leaving their past, because their homeland is never more than a touch screen away. They can maintain their old relationships, consume their old media and keep contact with their old neighborhoods, living in two worlds and neither at the same time. There is some evidence that this could be slowing down assimilation. Ethnic enclaves can be almost as all-encompassing when they are digital as when they are geographic.

Fuzzier but no less real are the changes in the posture of Americans toward their own cultural identity. Immigrants still do want to become Americans, but they are assimilating into a national identity that is fractured, adversarial and uncertain. And at almost the same time that America extended its promise to nonwhites in the 1960s, it began to abandon the goal of unity out of plurality. The idea that there are certain values or principles that immigrants and natives alike should adopt as Americans has eroded: To some parts of the right, our ideals are ancillary to the concreteness of ancestry; in some parts of the left, they are a bad joke, an obstacle to equity.

The world has changed, so the way that we think about what it means to become American must too. But one thing remains the same: A cohesive and inclusive American identity won’t just create itself. It must be forged. And it’s a project that we must all participate in, adapting the successes and avoiding the missteps of the past.

It’s a serious task that calls for sweeping solutions. A sharp across-the-board reduction in legal immigration — paired with a generous amnesty program for those undocumented and unauthorized immigrants who are established in America — might help America regain its balance and compose a new harmony out of its profuse cacophony.

But that alone is likely to be insufficient. The English writer and philosopher G.K. Chesterton, after visiting the States in 1921, said that Americans had styled themselves a “nation with the soul of a church.” In 1956, Horace Kallen, the father of cultural pluralism, went even further, writing that “the American Idea is, literally, religion.” If one can inherit a creed, then it is in the same way one is inculcated into a faith. It requires a practice. A mandatory national service program, in which 18-year-olds work shoulder to shoulder with Americans from different backgrounds, could serve that purpose, just as mandatory military service did in World War II.

These suggestions are thorny, and have difficulties of their own. An immigration pause would need exceptions to respect international asylum law, for instance, and if America is going to prevent disadvantaged people from improving their lives by immigrating here, it has a moral duty to help them where they are. Mandatory national service would be both socially and economically disruptive. It may also be the case that Americans have no appetite to pursue these options, even if they were guaranteed to work.

But an American identity that can unite us all is worth fighting for. Our country has urgent problems, and solving them requires the civic solidarity that thinking of ourselves as Americans helps to create. The historian Richard Slotkin has observed that a workable American identity must join both the descendants of the Indigenous and those who dispossessed them, the line of the enslaved and those who possessed them, those who can trace their lineage beyond the Revolution and the newly arrived, the natural-born and the naturalized; a teeming profusion of races, cultures, classes and religions. It is a challenge and a burden. It is also, though, a blessed inheritance.

Source: This Is the Birthright Reckoning That America Needs

Immigrants with no criminal convictions represent sharpest growth in ICE detention population

Not surprising, unfortunately, no respect for rule of law, due process and competence:

President Trump is enacting a mass deportation campaign promised to be the largest in U.S. history. New data is giving a clearer picture of exactly what that looks like: at least 56,000 immigrants are being held in ICE detention.

According to the Deportation Data Project, a group that collects immigration numbers, about half the people in detention don’t have criminal convictions. That’s close to 30,000 people in detention, without a criminal record — the group that has grown the most in recent months.

“You listen to Tom Homan and Stephen Miller, they’re saying things like they are going after the worst of the worst, the people who are murderers,” says UCLA Professor Graeme Blair, referring to President Trump’s ‘Border czar’ Tom Homan and key White House Aide Stephen Miller. “That’s just not what the data says about the people that they are actually arresting.”

Source: Immigrants with no criminal convictions represent sharpest growth in ICE detention population

Marcus Kolga: University of Toronto education project risks reinforcing Russian disinformation

Sigh. Historical amnesia:

…Titled “Post-Soviet Canadian Diaspora Youth and Their Families,” the project claims to explore the integration experiences of youth whose families came to Canada from countries colonized and oppressed by Soviet Russia. While its stated intent may indeed be to foster a deeper understanding of these communities, the project’s language and conceptual framing are historically inaccurate, politically insensitive, and risk reinforcing harmful Kremlin-aligned stereotypes about the very groups it aims to study.

By lumping together all nations once occupied by Soviet Russia into a single “post-Soviet” identity, the project risks distorting the unique histories, cultures and political experiences of Canadians who are of Baltic and Ukrainian heritage, as well as all nations that were violently subjected to Soviet cultural annihilation. Worse, this framing unintentionally echoes Russian propaganda efforts that seek to blur the line between occupier and occupied, casting doubt on the legitimacy of these nations.

The project defines the Soviet Union as “formerly the largest country in the world,” and a “multinational and multicultural country … experimenting (with) communist ideology.” This portrayal omits critical context about the violent and repressive nature of Soviet colonization. There is no mention of the mass deportations, forced famines or repression that defined millions of lives under Soviet Russian rule.

Particularly disturbing is the project’s inclusion of a map that depicts Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania as part of the Soviet Union. During the Cold War, most North American textbooks marked these nations differently to denote their illegal occupation. The map used by OISE more closely resembles those found in Soviet schoolbooks, presenting occupation as full annexation and thereby indirectly legitimizing Russia’s imperial conquest.

While this may seem like a simple and innocent error, it reflects a deeper failure to recognize that the Baltic nations didn’t just “transition to different, non-communist forms of statehood” in 1991, as the project claims. These were independent nations illegally invaded and annexed by the Soviet Union in 1940, a pattern Russia repeated with its 2014 occupation of Crimea. Their reassertion of independence in 1991 was not the birth of new states, but the restoration of sovereign ones whose continuity Canada rightly recognized. Then-prime minister Brian Mulroney was the first G7 leader to formally re-establish diplomatic ties with the restored Baltic governments.

This key fact in Canadian foreign policy is ignored. As then-prime minister Justin Trudeau stated in 2016: “Canada never recognized the Soviet Union’s occupation of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, and always supported their struggle to restore independence during decades of Soviet occupation.”…

Source: Marcus Kolga: University of Toronto education project risks reinforcing Russian disinformation

Emigration up, immigration down: Trends contributing to slower population growth, says StatCan

Of note:

The number of people leaving the country has been slowly increasing in recent years, according to recent data from Statistics Canada. Meanwhile, immigration levels are down in the wake of federal reductions. Both these trends are contributing to a larger picture of significantly slowing population growth, according to StatCan analysis.


StatCan includes Canadian citizens and permanent residents when it refers to emigration or emigrants — folks who leave Canada to reestablish their permanent residence in another country. Immigrants, people who come to live in Canada, include permanent residents and landed immigrants.

How many people have been leaving Canada?


During the first quarter of this year, 27,086 people emigrated from Canada. It was 25,394 in the first quarter of 2022, then 25,536 in the first quarter of 2023 and up to 26,293 in the same quarter of 2024. The number of emigrants peaked at more than 31,000 in the third quarter of 2017, and hit over 30K midway through 2018 and 2019.

The number of emigrants peaked at more than 31,000 in the third quarter of 2017, and hit over 30K midway through 2018 and 2019.


The lowest emigration level in recent years was in the second quarter of 2020 — at just 7,431. Though, that’s unsurprising considering it is when the COVID-19 pandemic hit. After that, emigration started ramping up again.


What are the predictors of likely emigration?


A 2024 StatCan report looked at the likelihood of departure by folks who had previously immigrated to Canada.


It showed that 5.1 per cent  of immigrants admitted between 1982 and 2017 emigrated within five years of arriving. That number jumped to 17.5 per cent 20 years after entering Canada.

The report did not present data on eventual destinations as “emigrants are not required to report their departure from Canada or their destination,” Jada Cormier a communications officer with Statistics Canada told National Post in an email….

Source: Emigration up, immigration down: Trends contributing to slower population growth, says StatCan

Content changes for the 2026 Census of Population: Ethnic or cultural origins, religion, immigration, citizenship and place of birth

The most notable change, IMO, is the decision to collect religious affiliation data ever 5 years, instead of every 10:

Religion

Changes evaluated in the  2024 Census Test

  • Statistics Canada evaluated the inclusion of the question on religion in the 2026 Census to address the increased demand for more frequent data on religious groups (i.e., every 5 years rather than every 10 years).
  • The list of examples was reviewed and updated to ensure relevance for the 2026 Census.

Resulting approach for the  2026 Census of Population

  • The questionnaire will include the same question on religion as the 2021 Census, with an updated list of examples directly in the questionnaire to reflect the highest-frequency responses in the previous cycle.
  • The extensive list of examples provided via hyperlink will remain the same as in 2021.

Why are these questions asked?

A question on religion has been included in the Census of Population every 10 years since 1871, reflecting a long-standing, continuing and widespread demand for information about religious affiliation and diversity in Canada.

Information on the religion of the population is commonly used by governments, as well as by religious groups, denominations and associations across the country. For example, these data support the planning of programs and inform decisions on where to establish places of worship such as churches, synagogues, mosques and temples. Additionally, this information is used to evaluate the need and potential for separate religious schools in some provinces. It also provides insights on the diversity of Canada, highlights the unique experiences of various religious groups and supports efforts to combat hate crimes.

Current trends and data gaps for this topic

Religion is a core dimension of ethnocultural diversity in Canada. Combining religion with other variables, such as ethnic or cultural origins, racialized groups, languages, and immigration data, is essential for conducting intersectional analyses and providing a detailed portrait of the diversity of the Canadian population.

Historically, data on religion have been collected every 10 years, with the most recent data being from the 2021 Census. Statistics Canada heard from key stakeholders and data users that there was an increased need for benchmark data on religious groups to respond to the rapid changes in Canadian society through immigration and the increased diversity of the population, as summarized in 2026 Census of Population Content Consultation Results: What we heard from Canadians. The 2021 Census measured the rapid growth of some religious groups since data were last collected in 2011. For example, the proportion of the population who reported being Muslim, Hindu or Sikh has doubled in the last 20 years. In addition, the share of the population reporting no religious affiliation, or a secular perspective (atheist, agnostic, humanist and other secular perspectives) rose from 16.5% in 2001 to 34.6% in 2021.

To ensure that the census measures important trends in society, continues to produce relevant and high-quality data, and meets the increased demand for more frequent data on religious groups, Statistics Canada considered including the question on religion in the 2026 Census to increase the frequency of data collection. Canada is an increasingly diverse country, and the inclusion of this question on a more frequent basis will better measure the growing religious diversity in the country. One minor change was introduced: the list of examples presented directly in the questionnaire was updated to reflect the highest-frequency responses in the previous cycle.

These changes have been carefully analyzed, discussed with stakeholders and guided by expert advice to preserve the relevance and overall quality of the data on religion, as well as to ensure that legislative and policy requirements continue to be met.

Source: Content changes for the 2026 Census of Population: Ethnic or cultural origins, religion, immigration, citizenship and place of birth

Thousands of foreigners’ criminal convictions forgiven by Ottawa over 11-year span, raising transparency concerns

Rempel Garner and Kurland correct to call for more transparency:

More than 17,500 foreigners have had their criminal convictions forgiven by the Immigration Department over the past 11 years, removing a bar to coming to Canada, federal government figures show. The disclosure has raised transparency concerns about the type of offences they committed.

Foreigners are, in general, inadmissible to Canada if they have been convicted of an act that is considered a criminal offence in this country. But Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has the power to grant an exception if five years have elapsed since a person was convicted or finished a sentence. 

Government figures show that in the 11 years up to and including 2024, 17,600 people convicted of criminal offences abroad were considered “rehabilitated” by IRCC. This meant they were able to apply to enter Canada, including through work and study visas, as permanent residents or visitors. 

IRCC has not, however, released a breakdown of the kind of criminal offences that were forgiven. It said in a statement to The Globe and Mail that the Immigration Minister would be involved in decisions relating to the most serious offences. …

Source: Thousands of foreigners’ criminal convictions forgiven by Ottawa over 11-year span, raising transparency concerns