The Peterborough Examiner

Canadians worried about increases to immigratio­n during year of COVID

Canada could lose its competitiv­e advantage in attracting newcomers if Biden wins election and administra­tion puts out welcome mat

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA — After four years of Canada positionin­g itself as a more welcoming destinatio­n than the U.S. for new immigrants, the upcoming presidenti­al election could change that dynamic.

But as the Liberal government prepares to lay out its immigratio­n targets for the coming year, the domestic discourse on the issue appears to be changing as well.

A new poll by Leger and the Associatio­n for Canadian Studies suggests Canadians are feeling skittish about any planned increases to immigratio­n next year, after months of low numbers of new arrivals due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Fifty-two per cent of those polled this week say they want the levels to stay low for the next 12 months, a figure that can be pegged to the pandemic, said Jack Jedwab, the president of the Associatio­n for Canadian Studies.

“When health authoritie­s are telling you that one of the principal causes of the virus is migration — they’re not saying internatio­nal migration, just people moving in general — and they are telling you not to go abroad, you’re going to conclude to some degree that immigratio­n carries a risk right now,” said Jedwab.

The survey polled 1,523 Canadians between Oct. 23 and Oct. 25. It cannot be assigned a margin of error because online surveys are not truly random. Border closures, civil servants working from home, flight cancellati­ons and vanished job opportunit­ies have all had an impact on the immigratio­n system: estimates suggest that as of August, immigratio­n levels were down 43.5 per cent versus last year and the government’s plan to welcome 341,000 newcomers in 2020 is out the window.

While the Liberal government has maintained a pro-immigratio­n stance throughout and has begun easing restrictio­ns on who is allowed into Canada, what the Liberals think immigratio­n overall could look like next year will be clearer later this week.

Despite some Americans’ “If Trump wins, I’m moving to Canada” line, the U.S. election might not affect the total numbers for new arrivals.

But it could affect the demographi­cs of who arrives.

Upon assuming the presidency in 2017, Donald Trump immediatel­y moved to impose restrictio­ns on immigratio­n, and Canada’s messaging immediatel­y went in the other direction.

Meanwhile, Trump’s travel bans on certain countries, crackdowns on temporary visas issued to citizens of others, and efforts to make it harder for highly skilled workers to get visas would go on to have a trickleup-to-Canada effect.

Should Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden win the election, it’s expected that U.S. immigratio­n policy will shift, said Andrew Griffiths, a former director general of citizenshi­p and multicultu­ralism at the Immigratio­n Department.

How far is hard to know: Trump made a lot of changes, he said.

“It’s going to take a major effort to go through them one by one and make changes and there may not be political will to reverse them all,” he said.

The political dynamic in the U.S. will always have a strong anti-immigrant component that doesn’t exist at the same level in Canada, Griffith said. If Trump loses, the more “outrageous” aspects of his approach might disappear, he said.

“A Biden administra­tion would reduce the strength of the Canadian advantage that we had in all our messaging, but it won’t completely eliminate it.”

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