Just what is fuelling the birthright debate?
Tories narrowly passed a resolution that would end the standard of birthright citizenship
Maybe I overreacted.
But, at the same time, I don’t think it’s safe to play wait-andsee any more.
Last week, I wrote about the ways views are hardening against immigration, including the way former Conservative MP Maxime Bernier has recently seized on the idea that this country may have “too much diversity,” along with the way his former Conservative counterparts also seem to be reaching out towards those with anti-immigration views.
I’ve heard since then from several readers who argue that classing that sort of discussion as racist is unfair. (At the same time, many of those readers also agreed with my argument that, in Atlantic Canada, we desperately need immigration to bolster sagging population numbers.)
But, just as there are things that serve as dog whistles to certain aspects of the far right — coded messages that are meant specifically for their ears, and that others don’t easily discern — I think there are things that I’ve become hyper-alert about, especially when they sound like the beginning of normalizing discrimination.
One of those is the argument that we should be able to debate questions about immigration without being accused of racism. That’s absolutely true — we should be able to debate them, as long as the debate is not being used to cloak racism as something it isn’t.
There’s nothing wrong with debate, if debate is really what we’re talking about. If the debate is really “de-bait,” a way of coaxing or convincing a racist part of the electorate that you’re secretly on side with them, well, that’s different.
If anything, though, a vote at the Conservative policy convention in Halifax makes me question if I wasn’t on the right track to some degree.
It was ostensibly about using a large hammer on a small problem. The Tories narrowly passed a resolution that would end the standard of birthright citizenship — in other words, the idea that, if you are born in Canada, you’re automatically a Canadian citizen.
If the Conservatives were actually to enact the policy, it would mean that someone born in Canada would only be Canadian if one of their parents was either Canadian or a permanent resident.
Debate on the resolution centered around controlling “birth tourism” — the idea being that soon-to-be-parents might travel to Canada expressly to have a child who will then have Canadian citizenship. It’s not
“I think anyone who has watched the immigration debate south of the border realizes that we have to stand on guard when it comes to some of the things that hide behind the mask of free speech.”
even clear how significant the number of birth tourists there are; the B.C. hospital that kept records of the largest number of non-resident births last year listed 474 non-resident births.
My concern is that the message is something else again — that, even if you’re born here, you’re not really Canadian if your family’s not from here already. I question whether creating two tiers of people born in Canada — one group who are citizens, another who are something less — has less to do with “birth tourism” and more to do with appealing to people who want a whiter Canada of old.
It makes me particularly disappointed that the resolution was sponsored by two Newfoundland district associations, St. John’s East and St. John’s South-Mount Pearl.
I think anyone who has watched the immigration debate south of the border realizes that we have to stand on guard when it comes to some of the things that hide behind the mask of free speech.
By all means, people have the right to say them. That is the very nature of free speech.
I also think we have the right to call those words and their speakers out, especially when those words cloak a darker intent.
But I agree — name calling, even if it’s me calling individuals racist, isn’t enough.