Montreal Gazette

CAQ BASHING THE IMMIGRANTS QUEBEC NEEDS

Local labour pool not big enough to fill number of positions for economic vision

- ALLISON HANES ahanes@postmedia.com

After a breakfast speech Wednesday before the Montreal chamber of commerce, Coalition Avenir Québec leader and incumbent premier François Legault was forced to apologize for the “not true” comments of his immigratio­n minister last week.

During a debate in Trois-rivières, Jean Boulet claimed that 80 per cent of immigrants to Quebec “do not work, do not speak French or do not adhere to the values of Quebec society.”

Boulet tweeted a mea culpa for “expressing my thoughts badly” when called out for spreading misinforma­tion so flagrantly false, even Legault couldn't deny it — despite himself linking immigratio­n with “extremists” and “violence” earlier in the campaign before downgradin­g it to a mere threat to social cohesion.

But in an indication of just how sorry he is, Legault in the next breath said bringing more than 50,000 newcomers a year to Quebec would be “suicidal.”

These are just the latest glaring examples of how the CAQ talks out of both sides of its mouth about immigratio­n, depending on its audience.

To foment nationalis­m and justify laws that protect French or enshrine secularism at the expense of minority rights, the rhetoric centres on fear-mongering and immigrant bashing. But Legault's economic vision for Quebec hinges on the number and skill sets of immigrants, whether he likes it or not. Nobody knows this better than business leaders who can't meet demand for their products and services due to a worsening labour shortage.

Legault or Boulet, who is also labour minister, surely must have read the white paper on immigratio­n released by the Conseil du patronat. If they have, it makes their comments all the more disingenuo­us and hypocritic­al. If they haven't, they should take a peek.

It says Quebec will have 1.4 million jobs that need to be filled by 2026 due to a rapidly aging population, but only 78 per cent can be met with the local labour pool.

“To bridge the gap, immigratio­n is at once unavoidabl­e and fully necessary,” the white paper states. But it laments: “Certain myths about immigratio­n are difficult to dispel.

For instance, the image of the immigrant who arrives in the country with their suitcases and their baggage of skills, who doesn't speak French and is looking for a job ... is no longer reflective of the reality.”

Clearly these myths die hardest in the highest echelons of government.

The facts on immigratio­n fly in the face of the distortion­s about employment, language and integratio­n being peddled on the campaign trail.

Despite the economic slowdown of the pandemic, in 2021 the unemployme­nt rate among immigrants dropped to levels similar to those of Quebecers who were born here, according to the Conseil du patronat, with slightly higher rates for recent arrivals and lower levels among those who have been here more than five years.

Incomes for immigrants are also close to those of Quebec-born workers, especially for those who have been here longer. More recent arrivals do make less, but the data show they manage to catch up after a decade and even out-earn Quebecers.

La Presse columnist Francis Vailles came to a similar conclusion after his own analysis of Statistics Canada informatio­n on economic immigrants. He found that in 2019 economic-class arrivals in the province who have been here at least 10 years not only had higher incomes than their fellow Quebecers, they out-earned their counterpar­ts in Ontario and B.C.

A distinctio­n can certainly be made with the plight of immigrants who are refugees, reunifying with family, or asylum seekers, which the federal government picks.

Those admitted for humanitari­an reasons do tend to face greater challenges adjusting and learning the language — and more support should be directed their way.

But between 2015 and 2019, 58 per cent of new arrivals in Quebec were economic-class immigrants, which are chosen by the province. By 2019, 86 per cent of them came through the Quebec Experience Program, which offers people who go to school, train or secure jobs here a path to a selection certificat­e and permanent residency.

The Conseil du patronat touted the program's success, noting candidates “are chosen for their competenci­es — as recognized by their employers — either because they studied in a Quebec institutio­n or were able to familiariz­e themselves with our culture and develop networks.”

Yet the CAQ government's bungled efforts to reform the Quebec Experience Program in 2019 jeopardize­d all the applicatio­ns in the pipeline. The government abandoned its plans and apologized after an outcry from newcomers already working here and their employers, but not before it revealed its hand.

As for language, census data from 2016 show that only 22 per cent of immigrants to Quebec reported French as their mother tongue. But 83 per cent had knowledge of French upon arrival.

Either Boulet is manipulati­ng cherry-picked data, or he has his facts backwards.

Some 46 per cent of immigrants selected by Quebec also have a university degree, double the rate of the general population. So much for being a burden.

Quebec's political parties all have proposals for resettling more immigrants outside of Greater Montreal to fill labour shortages and deal with the fallout of an aging society. New arrivals who obtained medical degrees in their home countries have been mentioned as one way to help more than a million Quebecers who don't have a family physician.

Simply put, Quebec badly needs the very immigrants the party leading in the polls is disparagin­g and depicting as a problem.

The blatant politiciza­tion and polarizati­on of this sensitive issue only undermines prosperity, plays Quebecers for fools and harms the social fabric Legault pledges to be so concerned about.

Quebec badly needs the very immigrants the party leading in the polls is disparagin­g and depicting as a problem.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Outgoing immigratio­n minister Jean Boulet recently claimed 80 per cent of immigrants “do not work, do not speak French or do not adhere to the values of Quebec society.”
JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Outgoing immigratio­n minister Jean Boulet recently claimed 80 per cent of immigrants “do not work, do not speak French or do not adhere to the values of Quebec society.”
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