Tag Archives: Jack Jebwab

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Sixty per cent of Canadians say Canada is admitting too many immigrants: poll

The proportion of Canadians who feel Canada is admitting too many immigrants is ‘the highest on record in this century’

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Sharon Kirkey

Published Jul 25, 2024  •  Last updated 1 day ago  •  4 minute read

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Marc Miller.
Immigration Minister Marc Miller helps conduct a citizenship ceremony during the Calgary Stampede on July 13, 2024. Miller announced last year that Canada would cap immigration targets at 500,000 annually starting in 2025. Photo by Darren Makowichuk/Postmedia

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Canadians are growing increasingly uneasy with the number of new immigrants coming to the country, with three out of five people saying there are “too many,” the highest rate of dissatisfaction with Canada’s immigration policies in decades, according to a new poll.

Sixty per cent of Canadian adults surveyed in the July poll said Canada accepts too many newcomers, a 10-percentage-point increase in the number who shared that sentiment in February.

Overall, just 28 per cent of respondents in the new poll, conducted by Leger for the Association of Canadian Studies, said the number of new arrivals is about right. Three per cent said there are “too few” immigrants coming to Canada.

The housing crisis and economic worries are driving a dramatic shift in attitudes over immigration numbers that emerged in the aftermath of the pandemic, said Jack Jedwab, president of the Association of Canadian Studies. Immigration is also moving to the top of national political agendas in the U.S. and many parts of Europe, “and I don’t think Canadians are insulated from those global debates,” Jedwab said.

In France, Marine Le Pen’s anti-immigration party significantly increased its seats in the country’s snap election. A June Gallup poll found that 55 per cent of Americans want to see less immigration, up from 41 per cent in 2023. Former U.S. president Donald Trump has promised militarized mass deportations if re-elected.

“My sense is that global instability, whether it’s Russia-Ukraine or the Middle East, is affecting some of this. I think Canadians are taking notice,” Jedwab said.

In a previous poll, Jedwab asked Canadians who felt there are too many immigrants why they felt that way. It was more about economic concerns and far less about identity issues as reflected by the view that immigrants don’t share “Canadian values.”

But the 10-point jump since February in the number Canadians who now feel there are too many immigrants “seems to be coinciding with this sort of global dislocation or global instability,” Jedwab said.

It’s difficult to tease out, but in one test of a possible correlation between global conflicts and changing attitudes towards immigration, some three in four people who strongly supported the police’s dismantling of anti-Israel encampments at McGill University this summer believes that there are too many immigrants coming to Canada.

Recent immigrants also think Canada’s immigration levels are too high, with 42 per cent of more than 2,000 adults who immigrated to Canada within the past decade telling Leger in a poll conducted between December 2023 and February 2024 that the Trudeau Liberals’ new immigration targets are too permissive.

Immigration Minister Marc Miller announced last year that Canada would ease government immigration targets, capping newcomers at 500,000 annually starting in 2025. Those targets are up from less than 300,000 immigrants yearly when the Liberals came to power in 2015.

Canada plans to admit 485,000 new immigrants this year.

Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre has said he would fix Canada’s “ruined” immigration system by tying population growth to the growth in the supply of housing.

The new Leger poll was conducted from July 12 to July 15. The percentage saying there are too many new immigrants — 60 per cent — is the highest Jedwab has seen “in this century” and is more than double the 28 per cent who felt that way in a federal citizenship and immigration survey in 2006.

Across all political parties, more people feel there are too many immigrants than the right number, according to the Leger poll: 45 per cent of Liberal voters felt that way, compared to 43 per cent who said Canada was accepting “about the right number.” Some 76 per cent of Conservative voters think immigration levels are too high.

Concerns around immigration are highest in Alberta (67 per cent of Albertans said there are too many newcomers), Ontario (62 per cent) and Quebec (61 per cent).

Torontonians are more concerned with immigration numbers than are Montrealers or Vancouverites, though more than half across all three cities feel there are currently too many immigrants coming to Canada. “The perceived degree of pressure on their space and available services may be seen as  higher in the city with, by far, the largest number of immigrants,” Jedwab said.

More than half (54.7 per cent) of non-white respondents also agreed the numbers are too high, while 32.5 per cent felt the numbers are about right.

“Leger didn’t include immigrant and non-immigrant in the sample, but the vast majority of immigrants to Canada are visible minorities,” Jedwab said. “The results make it difficult to argue that prejudice is a main driver of opposition to the number of immigrants,” he said.

The youngest adults are least concerned with current levels of immigration, with 41 per cent of 18- to 24-year-olds telling Leger they think there are currently too many immigrants coming to Canada. The oldest (55 and older) were the most concerned, even though, paradoxically, “immigrants to Canada are important for demographic reasons, and to offset the aging of the population and maintain a balanced ratio of retirees to workers,” Jedwab said.

Some 1,784 respondents were interviewed for the ACS-Leger survey. A margin of error cannot be associated with a non-probability sample in a panel survey for comparison purposes. A probability sample of 1,784 respondents would have a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20. (National Post, July 25, 2024)

Rapid rate of immigration is changing the face of Canada

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Rapid rate of immigration is changing the face of Canada

‘INCREASINGLY A COUNTRY OF IMMIGRANTS,’ AND ONE THAT IS BOTH PROUD AND ASHAMED OF CANADA

  • National Post
  • 2 Jan 2024
  • Joseph Brean
Boxing Day at the Rideau Centre in Ottawa. The surge in new Canadians is having an affect national identity, according to a Leger poll.

Canada’s demographic revolution is running at a furious pace, with population growth outstripping even the boldest predictions, mostly due to immigration, with important implications for Canadian identity as much as demography, according to a new poll by Leger for the Association for Canadian Studies.

Canada’s population surpassed 40 million people this summer, earlier than predicted. Statistics Canada reported recently that Canada’s population grew by more than 430,000 in the third quarter of this year, for a total of 40.5 million.

Non-permanent residents made up more than 300,000 of those 430,000 who arrived over the three months.

“Our population is growing much faster than predictions of our national statistics agency, even the adjusted ones,” said Jack Jedwab, CEO of the Association for Canadian Studies, a think tank in Montreal.

Population growth is so high compared to other countries that Canada leads the G7 in it, and is in the top 20 fastest-growing countries in the world.

“Immigration is driving almost all of our population growth, given reduced birth rates,” said Jedwab.

If current trends persist, the population will double in 25 years, and nearly half of Canadians by then would identify as racialized or visible minority, the ACS’S report on the poll suggests.

Pointing to the 32 per cent of people under 15 years of age who identify as visible minority, compared to 26.5 per cent of the total and just 14.5 per cent of people over 65, according to Statistics Canada data, Jedwab said we are “also seeing a greater diversification of the population, particularly the younger generations.”

One projection based on a reference scenario showed that by 2041 at the latest, most Canadians will be immigrants or the children of immigrants. Jedwab said the results showed that could be as soon as 2031, or even earlier.

From 2011 to 2016, that demographic increased from 39.5 to 41.5 per cent of Canadians.

Canada has often described itself as a nation of immigrants but this was sometimes aspirational as much as descriptive. The idea signalled an ideological openness more than a head count, because demographics showed Canada was mostly a country of Canada-born Canadians.

This is what is changing at an increasing pace, according to these surveys. Canada is becoming what it has long claimed to be but never fully was.

“I think we’re increasingly becoming a country of immigrants,” Jedwab said.

“In terms of identity dimensions, we’re seeing across the board changes in terms of patterns of religious identification, less so of ethnicity, but more multiple identity.”

Christianity is well on its way to minority status. The report says that in 2021, 19.3 million people representing 53 per cent of the population reported a Christian religion. A decade earlier, it was 67 per cent. A decade before that, at the turn of the century, it was 77 per cent.

More than a third report no religion, a proportion that has doubled over 20 years from 16.5 per cent in 2001 to 34.6 per cent in 2021.

As that changes, Jedwab’s report tried to measure what this means for national identity, for what people think and feel about Canada’s past, present and future.

One important finding is that a significant segment of the population is both ashamed and proud of Canada.

This dual view is often described as an oxymoron, a lamentable overreaction to an increased focus in schools and public discourse on the evils of history, even a kind of ethnic self-loathing that is toxic to national self-esteem.

The report does not show this. Asked how much they agree, whether strongly or somewhat, with the statement, “I am proud of the history of Canada,” the total agree proportion was 83 per cent, from a low of 70 per cent among 18 to 24 year olds, to 90 per cent among over 65s. Asked to say the same about the statement, “There are some events in Canada’s history that make me feel ashamed of the country,” a clear majority agreed with both. They felt pride and shame in Canada’s history, simultaneously.

Treatment of Indigenous people and residential schools were far and away the top examples given of shameful events, with lesser mention of Japanese-canadian internment, the Chinese head tax, and turning away European Jewish refugees from the Second World War.

Canadians, according to this poll, do not think they are personally responsible for historical injustices or the subjugation of Indigenous people. Fewer than one in six hold this view, the poll shows.

It is a common argument that to benefit today from yesterday’s unfair systems is still to participate in them, and thereby to share blame. But most people do not share the view, part of what Jedwab describes as “the settler-colonist discourse.”

“I think people don’t feel that way,” Jedwab said

This does not stop them feeling shame, though, which they hold simultaneously with pride. A full 60 per cent of people who strongly agree that some events make them feel shame also feel very attached to Canada, the survey shows.

Jedwab sees this as an important point, sometimes wrongly dismissed as counterintuitive, even a contradiction in terms. But being ashamed of Canada’s historical faults as a proud, modern Canadian is not oxymoronic. It is in fact common, the poll suggests.

“Those people don’t see the contradiction between feeling proud of our country’s accomplishments and feeling ashamed of the things we’ve learned about its history, particularly about treatment of Indigenous peoples,” Jedwab said.

A slight majority of 52 per cent believe that in Canada “everyone is born with an equal opportunity to succeed.” That view is stronger among older demographics, as high as 63 per cent among the over 55s, and among those who were born outside Canada, at 57 per cent.

In ranking a set of challenges from biggest to smallest, a few things stood out.

Respondents in Alberta were way over the national average in choosing ideological conflict between the right wing and left wing.

Respondents in the Prairies were way over the national average is choosing Indigenous and non-indigenous relations.

Fewer than one person in 10 prioritized gender relations, and even fewer immigrant and non-immigrant relations. Religious and secular relations barely registered. But relations between rich and poor was at the top, just behind ideological conflict.

Conducted in September, the survey of 1,502 Canadians was done via an online panel. Traditional margins of error do not apply, but a similarly sized random sample would have a margin of error of 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20.