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Politics Jun 17, 2026

Canada’s Troubling Turn on Migrant and Refugee Rights

Canada’s new Liberal government under Mark Carney is tightening migration rules despite Davos‑stage…
The Divergence Between Carney’s Davos Rhetoric and Domestic PolicyAt the World Economic Forum, Mark Carney urged “middle powers” to break from a U.S.-led order, yet refugees and migrants in Toronto hear a different message: a government that is rapidly closing doors.Co‑executive director Diana Gallego of the FCJ Refugee Centre describes the contrast as “hollow” and warns that Canada is at a “troubling” crossroads. Escalating Restrictions: Bill C-12 and Visa CutsSince taking office in April 2025, Carney’s Liberal administration has:Passed Bill C-12, granting Ottawa power to cancel visas en masse, including for permanent residents, on “public interest” grounds.Restricted access to the refugee status determination system, a move critics label “arbitrary” and potentially unconstitutional.Cancelled large numbers of international student and work visas, leading to a sharp drop in temporary migration.Frozen refugee resettlement applications and cut funding for refugee‑health programmes. Numbers Behind the Shift: Temporary Residents Drop 15% Since 2024Official figures show:Peak of 3.15 million non‑permanent residents in October 2024 – about 8 % of Canada’s population.By early 2026, that number fell to roughly 2.67 million, a 15 % decline.Backlog of nearly 300,000 asylum cases pending before the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) at the end of 2025. Political and Social Fallout: Public Sentiment, Party Politics, and Rights AdvocacyA 2024 poll recorded a majority of Canadians saying there is “too much immigration” for the first time in decades, fueling xenophobic incidents in major cities.Right‑wing parties have seized the narrative:The Conservative Party calls for ending “birthright citizenship” and slashes to refugee health services.Conservatives echo U.S. rhetoric, framing migrants as a strain on housing, healthcare and jobs.Rights groups counter that housing price pressures are overstated and that the government is deflecting from under‑funded public services. Looking Ahead: Legal Challenges and Potential Policy ReversalsBill C-12 is expected to face a constitutional challenge under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.Experts suggest that sustained civil‑society pressure, combined with Carney’s still‑high approval ratings, could force amendments or a rollback of the most restrictive measures.However, if the government continues to link migration to “fraud” and “public interest,” Canada risks further isolation from its historic human‑rights reputation.
#Mark Carney #Bill C-12 #Canada
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