Conservative deputy leader says Canadian ā€˜consensusā€™ immigration is under strain – National

by Pelican Press
18 views 6 minutes read

Conservative deputy leader says Canadian ā€˜consensusā€™ immigration is under strain ā€“ National

Conservative Deputy Leader Melissa Lantsman says the Canadian ā€œconsensusā€ on welcoming newcomers is straining under the Liberal governmentā€™s push to increase immigration levels.

In an interview with The West Blockā€™s Mercedes Stephenson, Lantsman said that the federal government needs to build ā€œcapacityā€ for increased security screening and immigration enforcement.

ā€œThereā€™s a serious conversation about, you know, about immigration, about the consensus that we enjoyed in the system, about the Canadian dream that is promised to people when they come here,ā€ Lantsman said in an interview.

ā€œPeople like my parents, people like parents across the country, grandparents who came here to build a better life for their families and now are forced using food banks, who donā€™t have the housing, who donā€™t have the health care or canā€™t see a doctor, canā€™t find a spot in school.

ā€œThis is a system that is broken and it deserves a conversation, and it deserves a government thatā€™s going to take it seriously and not break it.ā€

Story continues below advertisement

The Liberal governmentā€™s 2024-2026 immigration plans set a target of 485,000 newcomers this year, rising to half a million new Canadians in both 2025 and 2026.

The majority of those come under ā€œeconomicā€ streams, such as high-skilled workers and people nominated by the provinces and territories, as well as family members of Canadians ā€” spouses, children, parents and grandparents.

For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.

Get breaking National news

For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.

But those new Canadians will face the same pressures being felt across the country, particularly when it comes to housing and economic opportunity.


Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has previously suggested Canadaā€™s immigration targets be linked to new housing starts, although itā€™s not clear precisely how that would work. The federal government controls immigration targets, but it does not directly control how many houses are built each year.

ā€œWe have built a country, and a strong country on people who have come here and a system that is broken fails those people, and it fails Canadians who canā€™t get the access to housing and who canā€™t get the access to professionals like doctors and nurses that we have a serious shortage of,ā€ Lantsman said.

Canadaā€™s immigration system has also come under increased scrutiny after two high-profile arrests over the summer of men accused of planning terrorist attacks.

Ahmed Fouad Mostafa Eldidi arrived in Canada in February 2018, and his refugee claim was accepted in 2019. After receiving a ā€œfavourable recommendationā€ from security screeners at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), he became a Canadian citizen in May 2024, according to the federal government.

Story continues below advertisement

The RCMP arrested Eldidi and his son, Mostafa, on July 28 for allegedly plotting an ISIS-inspired terror attack in Toronto.

Muhammad Shahzeb Khan received a student visa in May 2023 and arrived at Torontoā€™s Pearson International Airport a month later. He was arrested in Ormstown, Que., earlier this month and accused of attempting to make his way across the U.S. border to carry out a terror attack in New York on the anniversary of the Oct. 7 Hamas attack in Israel.

None of the charges against the three men have been tested in court.

Lantsman said that national security agencies and the Canada Border Services Agency need more ā€œcapacityā€ in the system to address security threats. But she stopped short of committing a Conservative government ā€“ who have made ā€œfixingā€ the federal budget one of their core commitments ā€“ of boosting the budgets of those agencies.

Asked how Canada can avoid the kind of anti-immigrant rhetoric being pushed by U.S. Republicans in the presidential election, Lantsman said she thinks Canadians ā€œagree that our national security should be at the forefrontā€ in the conversation.

Speaking to reporters in QuƩbec Friday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was asked why foreign intelligence agencies detected the recent terrorism allegations before Canadian authorities acted.

Trudeau called both cases ā€œextraordinarily seriousā€ and that they highlight ā€œjust how effectiveā€ Canadaā€™s security apparatus is.

Story continues below advertisement

ā€œWe work with partners around the world as a Five Eyes country sharing intelligence, and thereā€™s many situations where Canadian intelligence has been important to partners around the world,ā€ Trudeau said.

ā€œBut all of us are confronting similar threats of violent extremism and radicalism that requires us to be vigilant. We are constantly making sure that our security services and intelligence agencies are keeping Canadians safe, whether itā€™s through vetting people wanting to come to Canada or ensuring that people here are not threatening to cause harm to other Canadians.ā€

Trudeau said his government will continue to ā€œstep upā€ investments in national security and law enforcement.

&copy 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.




Source link

#Conservative #deputy #leader #Canadian #consensus #immigration #strain #National

Add Comment

You may also like