Penticton Herald

On immigratio­n, Grits, Tories not that different

- By ANDY BLATCHFORD The Canadian Press

“Mr. Speaker, the facts speak for themselves. This is the Conservati­ve position on parents and grandparen­ts. The Conservati­ves described parents and grandparen­ts as a “burden” on the federal government in terms of financial support. They have described parents and grandparen­ts as a drain on the provinces. That is their position. … We are responsibl­e for quadruplin­g the number of spaces that parents and grandparen­ts have to come to Canada. We will continue to reunite more families. I am amused by the Conservati­ves’ new-found passion for reuniting families. However, when they had the chance they failed.” — Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen during question period last week in the House of Commons

OTTAWA — The Liberal government was forced to fend off criticism last week over its new first-come-first-served online applicatio­n for immigrants hoping to sponsor their parents and grandparen­ts for permanent residency in Canada.

Some critics called the process unfair and discrimina­tory after it closed less than 10 minutes after opening, which prevented tens of thousands of people from submitting an applicatio­n. About 100,000 people were competing for 27,000 spots, said a spokesman for Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen.

Debate over the program launched the Liberals and Conservati­ves into a battle over how committed their respective government­s have been in recent years to reuniting immigrants with their parents and grandparen­ts.

Hussen’s remark raises a question — have the Liberals succeeded in reuniting more families under the parents and grandparen­ts program than their Tory predecesso­rs?

The Canadian Press Baloney Meter ranks political statements on a scale of “no baloney” to “full of baloney.” Hussen’s remark earns a rating of “a lot of baloney” — the statement is mostly inaccurate but contains elements of truth. Here’s why. THE FACTS

Between 2011 and 2015, the Conservati­ve government admitted an average of 20,370 permanent residents per year under the parents and grandparen­ts program, according to Immigratio­n Department annual reports.

The Liberals, who took office in late 2015, approved an average of 18,768 permanent residents per year under the program in 2016 and 2017. But Mathieu Genest, a spokesman for Hussen, stresses that Hussen was referring to overall family reunificat­ion in the part of the his statement where he said: “We will continue to reunite more families.”

He insists the parents-and-grandparen­ts program is only part of the Liberals’ work towards family reunificat­ion.

“When talking about family reunificat­ion, as the minister does in the second portion of the quote, it is important to not limit yourself to the parents and grandparen­ts program,” Genest wrote in an email.

Overall family reunificat­ion is made up of the parents-and-grandparen­ts program as well as the larger category of spousal sponsorshi­p.

Under the Liberals, there has been a notable increase in the number of people getting permanent residency status under the spousal program.

In 2016-17, the annual reports show an average of 61,117 people per year were accepted under this category. Under the Conservati­ves, the annual average of new permanent residents in the spousal program was 46,027.

For overall family reunificat­ion, Genest said the numbers will be higher in 2019 and 2020.

When it comes to the parents-and-grandparen­ts program, he said the Liberal government has reduced wait times to between 20 and 24 months while keeping a low backlog.

The Tories paused the acceptance of new applicatio­ns for parents and grandparen­ts between 2011 and 2013. After re-starting the process in 2014, the Conservati­ves set the maximum number of applicatio­ns accepted in the parents-and-grandparen­ts program at 5,000. Even with fewer new submission­s, Canada still approved tens of thousands of permanent residency applicatio­ns, including 32,318 new ones in 2013 alone.

The 2018 annual report said the Immigratio­n Department reduced the backlog by over 80 per cent between 2011 and 2017.

Since taking office, the Liberal government has raised the maximum number of applicatio­ns. This year, it will take in 20,000 complete applicatio­ns from the 27,000 submission­s.

Conservati­ve MP Michelle Rempel argued the Liberals are accepting more applicatio­ns without raising the number of parents and grandparen­ts that actually get permanent residence. Rempel insisted this approach will create another backlog, which means applicants will find themselves on a waiting list. WHAT THE EXPERTS SAY Immigratio­n experts say there’s been little difference between the Liberal and Conservati­ve approaches.

“It just sort of shows how, in fact, Liberals and Conservati­ves are kind of working on lockstep in this particular issue, despite the fact that the Liberals might want to identify their immigratio­n policies as more humane,” said Sharry Aiken, an immigratio­n law expert at Queen’s University.

“In this particular domain, we see that it’s not all that different. In fact, they’ve managed to facilitate reunificat­ion for fewer parents and grandparen­ts than were ... admitted in the Harper years.”

She noted that both the Liberals and Tories have steadily eroded the importance of family reunificat­ion.

David Cohen, a Montreal immigratio­n lawyer, agreed that on average the Conservati­ves and Liberals have admitted roughly the same of parents and grandparen­ts each year as permanent residents.

Cohen said even when the Conservati­ves took in just 5,000 new applicatio­ns, the number of admissions was similar to what has been accomplish­ed under the Liberals.

“There really isn’t a right and wrong here,” he said. “It’s just a fact that there are a lot more people who want to sponsor their parents than there are visas.”

THE VERDICT

The Immigratio­n Department’s latest numbers show that fewer permanent residents have been accepted under the parents and grandparen­ts program under the Liberal government, compared to its Conservati­ve predecesso­rs. For that reason, Hussen’s assertion the Liberals have reunited more immigrants with their families under this program is “a lot of baloney.”

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