The Post editorial
board: The Liberals have made a mess of immigration ...
Now Harper's Conservatives must clean
up! March 14,
2008
There are credible arguments
that Canada needs a great deal more immigration than it
allows now in order to secure its future prosperity. And
there are credible arguments that Canada could do with a
lot less. An honest person can defend either position.
But here's one that can't be defended: that Canada should
accept far more immigration applications than it ever
intends to process. For two decades or more, the backlog
of immigration paperwork has been growing, and waiting
times for acceptance lengthening, without any serious
attempt to shrink the gap. The Conservative government
now finally intends to do something about it, while
continuing to keep overall immigration at or above
current levels. And the Liberals, who are mostly
responsible for creating the problem, are not
happy.
Family-class immigration may be
the closest thing to a core principle that the Liberal
Party of Canada possesses. It is universally acknowledged
that the long chains of humanity that the family
reunification regulations pull into Canada, free from
official-language requirements and completely outside the
points system imposed on economic-class immigrants, are a
key to guaranteeing both the continued growth of the
party's voter base and the loyalty of existing supporters
who hope to transplant networks. The Liberals fear that
any cap on applications will end up being applied more
firmly to the family class, since the Conservatives are
openly seeking to make immigration conform better to the
labour market needs of Canada. It is hard to blame them,
given their interests, for being afraid -- assuming their
interests don't include what is actually best for the
country.
That includes recent immigrants
and low-skill Canadian workers, who face the toughest
wage pressures from continuing mass immigration. In
recent years it has become clear that the Liberal bargain
with new Canadians has had a diabolical quality: They are
let in the door, and no one warns them about the millions
who will storm through it behind them, competing for the
same work. In 1980, according to census figures, Canadian
immigrants who had been in the country for 10 years
enjoyed full wage parity with the Canadian-born. The same
measurement in 1990 showed that they were earning 90% as
much as natives. In the year 2000 it was 80%.
The math is easy to do, it's
fixing the problem that requires some mettle. The
Conservatives have pumped large amounts of money into
helping immigrants use their professional and technical
credentials here, recruiting foreign graduates of
Canadian post-secondary schools, and building a better
infrastructure for official-language
education.
But what we get from the
Liberals are the same platitudes we have been hearing for
generations: complaints of veiled racism, and phony
appeals to the mass immigration of a bygone age when
unskilled labourers could homestead unbroken land or make
a living supplying muscle power to technologically
backward industries.
Liberal immigration critic
Maurizio Bevilacqua had the chutzpah to say yesterday
that "family reunification ... attracts many skilled
workers to come here." The skilled workers we need are,
practically by definition, in the economic category --
and their wives and children are officially counted in
it, too. Mr. Bevilacqua presumably means to say that some
of the best and brightest are attracted to Canada because
of the chance that family reunification offers them to
bring their parents, grandparents and dependent relatives
here in the future.
If so -- and it is probably
true -- then those newcomers might not offer such a good
deal to a generous welfare state that will allow their
older family members full eligibility for Canadian social
benefits, old-age support and health care without
contributing a lifetime of taxes to the treasury. And
there is evidence that the sponsorship arrangements under
which family-class immigrants come to Canada often fail,
leaving provincial treasuries on the hook for heavy
social service obligations. Maybe the Conservatives do
intend to discriminate in favour of the immigrants more
interested in founding new Canadian families than
airlifting their existing ones here. And maybe it's about
time.
Immigration to Canada
Made Easy!
|