How Canada got immigration right for so long – and then got it very, very wrong

Canadian immigration was stable, popular and uncontroversial. But a series of changes after 2015 broke the national consensus, and the system Tony Keller The Globe and Mail Published 15 minutes ago

Refugees who made an irregular crossing at the Canada-U.S. border wait in a temporary detention centre in Blackpool, Que., in August, 2017. GEOFF ROBINS/AFP/Getty Images Refugees who made an irregular crossing at the Canada-U.S. border wait in a temporary detention centre in Blackpool, Que., in August, 2017. GEOFF ROBINS/AFP/Getty Images

Between 2021 and 2024, the United States had the highest level of immigration in its history.

That was the conclusion of a New York Times analysis published in late

See Full Page