1.2 million temporary residents must leave Canada in 2025 when their status expires. But will they?

Maria Alfaro has built a life in Canada with two hard-earned postgraduation diplomas in human resources and organizational management.

Since arriving here more than five years ago, the former international student from El Salvador has made new friends, joined a church and worked as an administrative assistant at a Toronto law firm.

Lately she is feeling deflated as the window of her Canadian dream is closing and her days in the country are numbered.


Not bloody likely, the Trudeau government has already lost track of an earlier cohort of 1 Million temporary residents: A million more non-permanent residents live in Canada than official figures say, ministers told

And this is why you can’t trust the Liberal Party’s CBC propaganda … Liberal government’s immigration plan will cut housing gap almost in half, report says

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Beware the spin around changes to Liberal immigration targets

Immigration targets slashed! Drastic reduction in temporary residents. Canada to reduce new immigration by 21 per cent.

Headlines like these dominated the news after Ottawa announced it was reducing Canada’s intake of permanent residents by 21 per cent over the next three years, alongside new measures to bring the population of temporary immigrants into line with goals for it.

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Snap election before Trump sworn in would be best for Canada: ex-minister

Former Liberal deputy prime minister John Manley says it would be in Canada’s best interest to hold an election as soon as possible.

In a recent Global News interview, Manley said he is worried that an election after U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration would mean the incoming federal government would be ill-equipped to navigate the incoming administration.

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To survive Donald Trump, Canada must do these four things. Justin Trudeau is going to hate them all

In January 2017, the day after Donald Trump signed what he called a “Muslim ban,” limiting travel from some Middle Eastern countries to the United States, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sent a signal, without mentioning Trump, that Canada was different.

“To those fleeing persecution, terror & war, Canadians will welcome you, regardless of your faith,” he tweeted. “Diversity is our strength #WelcomeToCanada”

I think Trump will simply ignore Junior.

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RCMP videos show how extremist ideology fuelled armed Coutts protesters

Sitting in an interview room in a southern Alberta RCMP detachment, Tony Olienick looked calm.

He stretched his legs as he casually told a police investigator what he thought should happen to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

“He needs to be tried for treason,” Olienick said between bites of dinner.

“If he’s proven guilty, like we know he is, hang him – and get back to how it should be.”

I bet the majority of Canadians have fantasized in similar fashion about Trudeau or other political opponents and let’s face it Justin is an extremist, a very harmful one.

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More than 10,000 foreign student acceptance letters may be fake, says top immigration official

More than 10,000 foreign student acceptance letters from Canadian colleges and universities have been flagged as potentially fraudulent this year, according to the top immigration official in charge of international students.

Enhanced checks by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada have found scores of would-be foreign students who said they had a genuine place to study may have been attaching a fraudulent acceptance letter to their application to get into Canada.

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Justin Trudeau is already getting it wrong on Trump

We’re going to be fine, just fine. That’s the message coming from the Trudeau government in the wake of Donald Trump’s decisive comeback.

Just so there’s no doubt, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland put it like this last week: “I want to say with utter sincerity and conviction to Canadians that Canada will be absolutely fine.”

Maybe it’s just me, but when people tell me they’re speaking with utter sincerity and conviction it leaves me with the nagging feeling that maybe there’s a bit of a question mark over both their sincerity and their conviction. As in: aren’t you trying a bit too hard here?

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4 in 5 of Trudeau’s migrants rely on food banks, Toronto report finds

As it has annually since the pandemic, the number of people visiting Toronto food banks for the first time soared again over the last year, and newcomers to Canada are among the largest cohort of new users.

According to the Daily Bread and North York Harvest food bank’s Who’s Hungry Report 2024 – compiled using data from almost 1,400 users and 67 community sites, along with independent research and analysis – 154,700 new clients availed of their services between April 1, 2023, and March 31, 2024.

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Joe Adam George: Khalistani-Hindu clashes product of Trudeau’s post-national experiment

In what has now become a common theme in the streets of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s post-national Canada, chaos and extremist violence marred an otherwise joyous occasion for the Canadian-Indian community celebrating Diwali and Bandi Chhor Diwas — festivals that symbolize the spiritual victory of good over evil and fighting injustice and oppression.

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Kelly McParland: Trudeau Liberals stick to same path Democrats took to defeat

Experience has taught Canadians our prime minister is resistant to opinions that differ from his own or his tight coterie of loyal advisors.

For an extended period he has been pressured to shift voters off their sense it’s time for new faces in Ottawa, an urge that has Liberals regularly trailing Conservatives by 15-20 points.

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Doug Ford calls Mexico ‘backdoor’ for Chinese goods, proposes Canada-U.S. free trade deal

Doug Ford

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is calling on Mexico to match trade tariffs on Chinese imports and says Canada and the United States should consider striking their own bilateral free trade deal if that doesn’t happen.

The Premier’s missive at Mexico comes after Donald Trump won the U.S. presidency with a promise to reopen the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement when it is up for review in 2026. The USMCA replaced the North America free-trade agreement and came into effect in 2020.

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Trudeau Lickspittle says ‘not everyone is welcome’ in response to concerns about Trump deportation plan … Bullshlit

Immigration Minister Marc Miller says the federal government is ready to work with the United States as it implements president-elect Donald Trump’s promises to crack down on immigration, but he wants anyone hoping to come to Canada to do so legally.

Ottawa has been under increasing pressure from opposition MPs, the Quebec Premier and immigration lawyers since last week’s U.S. election to respond to concerns that Mr. Trump’s plans to deport millions of people will lead to an influx of asylum seekers coming into Canada. Mr. Miller told The Globe and Mail that any claims that the incoming president’s plans could affect Canada are “speculation.”

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Why does the government hate us so much?

Why do they let these animals into the country?

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Trudeau’s pals: The pricks at the Century Initiative discuss the benefit of mass immigration in depressing wages

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FOURNIER: Trudeau the irrational, asking the impossible

Canadians woke up Monday November 4th to witness two opposing national political forces on course for a head-on collision.

On the one hand, they learned that Alberta’s Premier Smith received a 91.5% rank and file mid-term confirmation that her administration was delivering on her election campaign promises at the United Conservative Party’s (UCP) annual general meeting over the weekend.

On the other hand, they witnessed Trudeau’s administration respond by demanding that the Canadian oil and gas (COG) sector reduce its CO2 emissions by 35% relative to 2019 levels by 2030.

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