Trudeau’s Replacement Hookers Say He’s Gone Limp On Protection

For migrant women in the sex industry, Canada’s anti-human-trafficking strategies are a pipeline to harm

The Canadian federal government’s five-year strategy to combat human trafficking expires this year, and Ontario’s strategy will expire in 2025. Both the federal Liberals and Ontario Conservatives claim that their governments have made progress in addressing human trafficking. But we are advocates who have worked with migrants in the sex industry for two decades, and the stories they continue to tell us are not of being rescued from human traffickers by the police. Instead, they recount the terror of being targeted by anti-trafficking “rescue raids” – being surveilled, interrogated and strip-searched; having their wages, phones and passports seized by the police; and being placed in jail cells or immigration detention centres before being deported.

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42% of respondents felt immigration is causing Canada to change in unlikeable ways: Study

In-house research by the Department of Immigration says 47% of Canadians feel there are too many immigrants coming into Canada, according to Blacklock’s Reporter.

The 2024 IRCC Online Tracking Survey, conducted over a two-week period in November 2023 that coincided with street protests and antisemitic crimes following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, found the anti-immigration stance as high as 58% in Saskatchewan, 56% in Prince Edward Island, 52% in Ontario and 48% in Alberta.

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Every Canadian home builder would have to double their number of homes built to achieve Trudeau’s housing plan—output not seen in 25 years

One residential construction worker would have to produce nearly three-quarters of a home each year to meet the federal government’s 2031 housing goal, a number of homes-per-worker nearly two-times higher than today’s average, given major challenges around innovation and supply chains.

Last April, the Trudeau government announced its new housing plan, which included the promise of 3.87 million new homes by 2031.

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Canada Didn’t Live Up to Its Values on Immigration in Recent Years, Carney Says

Ignatieff but without the charm.

Canada didn’t live up to its values on immigration over the last few years as it allowed more people into the country than it could absorb, said former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney.

Carney, who is a special adviser to the Liberal party, made the comments at an event on Wednesday in Ottawa held by Cardus, a Christian think tank.

“I think what happened in the last few years is we didn’t live up to our values on immigration,” Carney said.

What a crock. He’s only sorry they got caught.

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Public opposition to immigration surges amid rising tensions

Support for Canada’s record-high immigration levels has plummeted, according to new polling by the Department of Immigration.

Blacklock’s Reporter says the decline in approval comes as Canadians express concerns over the strain on housing, social services, and societal integration, coinciding with heightened tensions following anti-Israel protests and incidents of antisemitic violence.

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Ireland’s migration election History shapes the nation’s populism

In many ways, Dundrum looks like the average Irish village. There’s a family butcher, a pub called Bertie’s, and rows of squatting slate-grey terraces. Yet walk down the R505, where Dundrum melts into the hedgerows of County Tipperary, and you’ll soon spot something else. There, outside Dundrum House, is an anti-migrant camp. Established back in August, locals are fighting the planned settlement of 277 refugees, with the former hotel set to be converted into an International Protection Accommodation Services (IPAS) centre.

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3rd World Class Status At Last!

This popular GTA restaurant chain allegedly withheld wages from international students and refugees

A well-known Caribbean restaurant chain is accused of owing almost $95,000 to a group of GTA workers that it allegedly failed to pay minimum wage — and, in some cases, did not pay at all.
Twelve former employees allege Sunrise Caribbean repeatedly issued bounced or incomplete paycheques to its cashiers, servers and chefs, some of whom have now been out of pocket for almost a year.

Most of them are refugee claimants or international students, the labour advocates representing them say.


A plague on all their houses.

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GUNTER: Time to get serious about immigration if we want to avoid Trump’s tariffs

President-elect Donald Trump’s threat of a 25% tariff on all Canadian goods entering the U.S. as of his first day in office has to be taken seriously. Seventy-eight percent of our exports (and about 42% of our economy) are based on trade with the U.S.

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Michael Barutciski: The Trudeau government claims it will reduce immigration, but how serious is it really?

The beleaguered Trudeau government recently released its annual report on immigration and it features a surprising about-turn—a pledge to significantly reduce immigration after years of touting it as a catalyst for Canada’s economic prosperity.

A proposed “temporary” reduction in “permanent resident” admissions—highlighted during an important press conference at the end of October—is getting the most media attention. However, the startling post-pandemic increase in the much larger “temporary resident” category is what ultimately destabilized the immigration system.

It isn’t serious in the least just more lies.

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Feds expect 4.9 million with expiring visas to ‘voluntarily’ leave Canada in next year

With almost five million temporary permits expected to expire over the next year, the feds expect them to leave voluntarily.

So said Immigration Minister Marc Miller to the Commons immigration committee when confronted with that number by Conservative MP Tom Kmiec, according to Blacklock’s Reporter.

“There are many ways that people leave the country,” said Miller. “The vast majority leave voluntarily. That is what is expected.”

They lie so casually.

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Marc Miller under fire over controversial immigration levels plan for Canada

Immigration Minister Marc Miller defended the Liberal government’s new immigration plan and promised further changes would be coming to keep the system — and Canada’s population growth — in check in the coming weeks.

Appearing before the House of Commons immigration committee on Monday to pitch the controversial plan, Miller was under fire from the right for the lack of details on how to ensure temporary residents with expiring status will voluntarily leave Canada and from the left for scapegoating migrants for the country’s affordability and housing crisis.


He has no plan other than to keep flooding the country with cheap labour.

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Ontario investigating recruiter in Alberta who helps supply low-wage foreign workers to Canadian Tire stores

Ontario’s Ministry of Labour is investigating the Alberta-based recruiter who was involved in bringing in scores of temporary foreign workers to staff low-wage jobs at Canadian Tire stores across Canada.

A ministry spokesperson told The Globe and Mail in an e-mail that it is conducting an open investigation into Allison Jones, the owner of a recruiting agency and an immigration consulting agency in St. Albert, outside of Edmonton. It did not provide any additional details about the probe.

Ms. Jones is a popular recruiter among franchisees of the Canadian Tire and Tim Hortons chains, helping franchise owners fill low-wage positions in their outlets with labour from abroad.

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New immigration rules spark concerns over Canadian job losses

Immigration Minister Marc Miller introduced new regulations this week allowing foreign students to work full-time during academic breaks, a move his department admits could increase competition for Canadian workers, particularly young people seeking entry-level or summer jobs.

“This may result in increased competition for Canadian workers,” the Department of Immigration stated in a Regulatory Impact Analysis Statement.

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Why illegal alien invaders from India are risking it all to chase the American Dream

In October, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) sent a chartered flight carrying Indian nationals back home, marking a growing trend in deportations to India.

This was no ordinary flight – it was one of multiple large-scale “removal flights” carried out this year, each typically carrying more than 100 passengers. The flights were returning groups of Indian migrants who “did not establish a legal basis to remain in the US”.

According to US officials, the latest flight carrying adult men and women was routed to Punjab, close to many deportees’ places of origin. No precise breakdown of hometowns was provided.

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