immigrantscanada.com

Independent topical source of current affairs, opinion and issues, featuring stories making news in Canada from immigrants, newcomers, minorities & ethnic communities' point of view and interests.

election tuesday: We are a pragmatic party, according to Toronto Star. Quebec Premier-designate Fran ois Legault leaves after speaking to the media the day after winning the provincial election Tuesday. I am a pragmatic guy, Legault said at his first news conference since his Coalition Avenir Quebec won 74 of the province's 125 ridings. Legault says his party will stick to the controversial promises they made during their campaign. But the first provincial government since the 1960s to be neither Liberal nor Parti Quebecois will be strongly nationalist with a focus on the Quebec identity issues that helped bring it to power. Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS He said he wants to build a strong Quebec inside Canada and to reduce Quebec's dependence on equalization payments from the federal government. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

force newcomers: The incoming government led by the centre-right Coalition could clash with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberals over several files -- with Legault's contentious pledges on immigration as potential headliners, according to CTV. Legault won after vowing to lower Quebec's annual immigration levels by 20 per cent and to force newcomers to pass French and values tests within three years of their arrival -- or face removal from the province. Legault's Coalition Avenir Quebec won a majority mandate Monday following a provincial election that knocked Philippe Couillard's Liberals from power. Enforcement, however, for such expulsions would fall to Ottawa. LeBlanc told The Canadian Press he wants to sit down with Legault's eventual minister responsible for immigration once the Coalition takes office. The federal Liberals have a more open approach to immigration and, while LeBlanc said Tuesday that he'd like to learn more about Legault's intentions, he noted that governing is different than running an election campaign. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

children: The investigation also found that the department falsely claimed there was a central database shared by DHS and the Department of Health and Human Services used to keep track of separated parents and children, according to Toronto Star. People line up to cross into the United States to begin the process of applying for asylum near the San Ysidro port of entry in Tijuana, Mexico. The department's Office of Inspector General found that Customs and Border Patrol held hundreds of children in short-term facilities for longer than permitted and provided inconsistent or incorrect information to their parents. Homeland Security's watchdog says immigration officials were not prepared to manage the consequences of its zero tolerance policy at the border this summer that resulted in separation of nearly 3,000 children from parents. The investigation was demanded by members of Congress from both parties following public outrage over the family separations. Gregory Bull / The Associated Press file photo Investigators found no evidence that such a database exists, John Kelly, the department's acting inspector general, wrote in a memo. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

future growth: Think-tanks are warning the province faces a slow-moving demographic crisis that will restrict future growth and make it harder to pay for its generous social services, according to Toronto Star. Naturally, then, Quebec's new premier is promising to slash immigration to the province by almost a quarter next year a move that will make the well-documented demographic problems even worse. Business leaders are complaining they can't find enough workers. Premier-elect Francois Legault speaks to supporters as he celebrates after winning the Quebec provincial election. But it clearly made political sense for Fran ois Legault and his Coalition Avenir Qu bec CAQ party, which won a resounding majority victory in Monday's election. Paul Chiasson / THE CANADIAN PRESS No, it doesn't make sense, at least economic sense. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

jewish kippas: In a press conference on Tuesday, Legault said he will invoke the notwithstanding clause in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to impose a ban on wearing religious symbols and dress by anyone in a position of authority, according to Rabble. The move would prevent public servants who interact with the public, which would include teachers, from wearing religious garments -- from Muslim hijabs to Jewish kippas. And the new premier-elect and leader of the Coalition Avenir Qu bec, Fran ois Legault, wasted no time in announcing a move that will set a new tone. He said he would amend the Quebec charter of rights to push the ban through. The Liberals were not even close. The announcement comes less than 24 hours after the CAQ leader was swept to power, defying pollsters as he took a solid majority of seats -- 74 out of 125, with about 38 per cent of the popular vote. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

movement contexts: Scott Neigh interviews Maynard about the book, and about what she has learned via conversation with activists and organizers in the course of her touring about the book's uptake in movement contexts and about the state of Black struggles in Canada today, according to Rabble. Since its release in 2017, Policing Black Lives has been reviewed favourably, read widely, and discussed extensively. Since the publication of her book Policing Black Lives State Violence in Canada from Slavery to the Present Fernwood Publishing, 2017 she has been doing launch events and speaking engagements in communities across the country. Its positive reception has spanned the range from glowing coverage in many of Canada's mainstream newspapers to praise as meticulously-researched and compelling by legendary African American feminist scholar and activist Angela Davis, and it has been a Canada-wide bestseller. One of its central tasks is linking the many ways and contexts in which anti-Blackness is experienced in this country today to their roots in slavery and other features of anti-Black oppression that were integral to society in what is now Canada in earlier centuries. As the title promises, the book traces the long history of how Black people have been surveilled, policed, and subjected to state violence in Canada. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

newspaper awards: Although much of their work depicts politicians and others in the public eye, Macpherson's wife Dorothy insisted that her husband wasn't particularly political, according to Rabble. He just had an innate sense of right and wrong, or who was honest and who wasn't. MacKinnon, who still draws for the Halifax Chronicle Herald, has won seven National Newspaper Awards, and Macpherson, who died in 1993, won six for his excellent work for the Toronto Star. An icon in some of his cartoons was the disheveled figure of the common man, John Q. Public, who Macpherson depicted as an onlooker puzzled by the excesses and hypocrisy of public figures. It depicts a blindfolded Lady Justice being held down by Republican hands as her scales of justice lie beside her. That's what distinguishes Mac Kinnon's stunning cartoon that has gone viral on social media this week. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

today: Today we have marked history, according to CTV. Today there are many Quebecers who have put aside a debate that has divided us for 50 years. The Coalition Avenir Quebec was elected Monday as the province's new government, making it the first time since 1970 that a party other than the Liberals or the Parti Quebecois will be governing Quebec. Today there are many Quebecers who have demonstrated that we can work together, said Legault. I invite all men and women of goodwill to join us, to put their shoulder to the wheel to do more for all Quebecers. We were able to gather and it's in the spirit of gathering that I have the intent to govern for all Quebecers. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

values test: The target number would mean a 24 per cent drop from the roughly 52,400 immigrants Quebec accepted last year, according to CTV. We are concerned about any proposal to reduce the number of immigrants, said Montreal Board of Trade president Michel Leblanc. Leader Francois Legault, a former businessman, pledged during the campaign to chop the number of immigrants to 40,000 a year from 50,000 and require them to pass a language and values test after three years in the province. We need to have more. Legault, whose party won Monday's election with 74 of the province's 125 ridings, has said he wants to increase efforts to integrate immigrants and ensure they learn French, rather than ramp up the number of new arrivals. Leblanc said many areas of the province are now beyond full employment, with a demand for more qualified workers in sectors from hospitality to transportation to Quebec's flourishing tech scene. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

immigrants: We are concerned about any proposal to reduce the number of immigrants, said Montreal Board of Trade president Michel Leblanc, according to Vancouver Courier. We need to have more. Leader Francois Legault, a former businessman, pledged during the campaign to chop the number of immigrants to 40,000 a year from 50,000 and require them to pass a language and values test after three years in the province.article continues below Trending Stories Vancouver Canucks tickets on Groupon start at 25Here's who's running for mayor in Vancouver this election'A Very Vegan Thanksgiving' to raise money for injured turkey's prosthetic leg You'll be able to buy booze at two Vancouver beaches next year The target number would mean a 24 per cent drop from the roughly 52,400 immigrants Quebec accepted last year. Leblanc said many areas of the province are now beyond full employment, with a demand for more qualified workers in sectors from hospitality to transportation to Quebec's flourishing tech scene. Leblanc was skeptical. Legault, whose party won Monday's election with 74 of the province's 125 ridings, has said he wants to increase efforts to integrate immigrants and ensure they learn French, rather than ramp up the number of new arrivals. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

philippe liberals: The seven-year-old Coalition won a healthy majority mandate Monday that knocked Philippe Couillard's Liberals from power, according to Vancouver Courier. It promises to present Justin Trudeau with a far more complex and potentially combative relationship than what the prime minister experienced with Couillard's staunchly federalist party. For the first time in almost a half-century, a federal government will deal with a Quebec government that isn't independentiste nor particularly pro-Canada.article continues below Trending Stories Vancouver Canucks tickets on Groupon start at 25Here's who's running for mayor in Vancouver this election'A Very Vegan Thanksgiving' to raise money for injured turkey's prosthetic leg Here's who's running for city council in Vancouver this election The new chapter is being cracked open by Francois Legault, whose centre-right Coalition party has a central vision of obtaining more autonomy for Quebec within the Canadian federation. It's very, very different it's a new era, said Eric Montigny, a political scientist from Universite Laval in Quebec City. Couillard, this is a party that is more autonomist. Compared to Mr. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

quebec liberals: In their desire to stick it to the establishment, many Quebecers don't seem overly concerned by the major debates of our era, writes Toulas Take electionqc Quebec Election qcpoli In an extraordinary change of guard, Fran ois Legault's right-of-centre federalist party swept into power with 74 seats, ending almost 50 years of two-party rule, according to National Observer. The Quebec Liberals saw their support base shrink dramatically, winning only one quarter of the popular vote, which translated into 32 seats. The big question now is whether history will be kind to Quebec for resoundingly electing a majority, first-time Coalition Avenir Qu bec CAQ government without the checks and balances of a strong opposition. The left-of-centre Quebec solidaire QS tripled its seats, and for the very first time, gained support and recognition beyond the island of Montreal in a spectacular showing that exceeded partisan expectations, with 10 elected members. Quebec's tectonic political shift Quebecers seem to have tossed the political establishment ceremoniously aside for the still-new CAQ, which has never before formed government, and the QS, which is seen by many as the ideological and spiritual leader of the now almost-defunct PQ.A major tectonic shift has undoubtedly taken place in this province; one that won't fully be visible until perhaps the next election. What used to be the established choice for Quebec separatists, the Parti Qu b cois PQ appeared sclerotic next to the emerging QS, as it lost official party status, winning just nine seats. ; It's enough to make your head spin. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

st-pierre: St-Pierre served as minister of international relations and la francophone in Philippe Couillard's cabinet, according to National Observer. I can say after four years, we leave the books with balanced budgets, an unemployment rate which is very low, and also we are proud of what we have done, the economy of Quebec is booming, so ... the house is clean, and I congratulate all the candidates who are here tonight. Despite being re-elected in her Acadie riding Monday night, cabinet minister Christine St-Pierre said she was very disappointed, but the Liberals would now take on the role of holding the new Coalition Avenir Qu bec government accountable. ; We will continue because we have a very good party, the Liberal Party of Quebec is a party with roots, with history, she said. She added the CAQ could expect a strong opposition from the Liberals, and an eye on whether the new government kept its campaign promises. Photo by Jose Desmarais Time for change Couillard conceded the Liberals' loss about an hour after polls closed Monday night, from his home town of Saint-F licien, north of Quebec City. Liberal MNA and former cabinet minister Christine St-Pierre watches Quebec election results in Montreal on Oct. 1, 2018. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

values test: We are concerned about any proposal to reduce the number of immigrants, said Montreal Board of Trade president Michel Leblanc, according to National Observer. We need to have more. Leader Fran ois Legault, a former businessman, pledged during the campaign to chop the number of immigrants to 40,000 a year from 50,000 and require them to pass a language and values test after three years in the province. ; The target number would mean a 24 per cent drop from the roughly 52,400 immigrants Quebec accepted last year. Leblanc said many areas of the province are now beyond full employment, with a demand for more qualified workers in sectors from hospitality to transportation to Quebec's flourishing tech scene. Leblanc was skeptical. Legault, whose party won Monday's election with 74 of the province's 125 ridings, has said he wants to increase efforts to integrate immigrants and ensure they learn French, rather than ramp up the number of new arrivals. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

defence officials: Defence officials shored up the vetting process, and planned to relaunch the program earlier this month, according to CTV. But there was an unexpected barrier when Homeland Security officials said they would not be able to protect new immigrant recruits from being deported when their temporary visas expired after they signed a contract to join the military, the U.S. officials said. The decade-old program has been on hold since 2016 amid concerns that immigrant recruits were not being screened well enough, and security threats were slipping through the system. They were not authorized to publicly describe internal discussions and spoke on condition of anonymity. Mattis, a combat veteran of multiple war tours, has fought with and commanded foreign nationals, and he believes their service adds to the lethality of America's fighting force, according to the officials. The program is called Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest program, or MAVNI. The plan to restart it was backed by Defence Secretary Jim Mattis, who believes that noncitizens can bring key skills, language abilities, and cultural knowledge to the military. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

mexican border: They received formal schooling and regular visits with legal representatives assigned to their immigration cases, according to Toronto Star. Demonstrators protest near the site of a tent city for migrant children near Tornillo, Texas, last week. Until now, most unauthorized children being held by federal immigration authorities had been housed in private foster homes or shelters, sleeping two or three to a room. The federal government has been moving hundreds of children a week under cover of darkness to the tent city on the Mexican border in West Texas. There is no school The children are given workbooks that they have no obligation to complete. VICTOR J. BLUE / The New York Times But in the rows of sand-coloured tents in Tornillo, Texas, children in groups of 20, separated by gender, sleep lined up in bunks. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

mountain life: There'll be a 5,000 grant attached, according to Vancouver Observer. It's a fitting tribute to the Canadian activist who died while making his film about illegal shark hunting. VIFF has announced a new prize to start next year called the Rob Stewart Eco Warrior Award to honor environmental film making with impact. Speaking of Canadian, five of my VIFF picks today are that or have a Canadian connection. But check out how off the wall it is. Glad to highlight them among these Mountain Life Last Summer Animal Behaviour Science Fair What Walaa Wants Inside My Heart Patricia Rozema's latest is a thoroughly entertaining study of that age-old testy relationship, mother and daughter. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

neighbourhood officer: Deputy Chief Peter Yuen says the expansion isn't a response to the jump in gun violence in the city, but that it will address guns and gangs, according to Toronto Star. Andrew Francis Wallace / Toronto Star This friendlier dress code is part of a six-month Toronto Police Service pilot project aimed at modernizing policing and enhancing officer relationships within the city's neighbourhoods, according to Deputy Chief Peter Yuen. And these officers will do it all while holding smartphones, and wearing ball caps and special Velcro patches affixed to their vests that read neighbourhood officer. This is the first time we're doing it, he said of the initiative. It's about a long-term relationship and trust. This is what the community wants us to do. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

ronald reagan: The IRI is one of the components of the National Endowment for Democracy by which it seeks to influence political outcomes and civic society in lesser developed countries around the world, according to Rabble. Its efforts are to channel politics and civic society to promote a neoliberal economic and political model; NED/IRI also engage in activities previously performed by the CIA. IRI is mainly funded by U.S. State Department, U.S. Agency for International Development and the National Endowment for Democracy. Ironically, it began with the International Republican Institute IRI eastablished by Ronald Reagan in 1983. IRI is loosely affiliated to the Republican party which doesn't provide any of its funding. the collapse of the Soviet Union, the IRI opened an office in Moscow in 1993 with some of the Americans, including Paul Manafort, started developing extensive ties to Russian politicians and oligarchs. ties continued to develop with Russian oligarchs, Christian conservatives, and pro-gun activists that helped Trump during the 2016 election and continue to support him today. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

voting station: The same is true in other countries, most obviously the U.S. and the U.K., places where democracy has been suppressed beyond recognition, according to Toronto Star. The people, in whose names these nations are governed, have never mattered less. But how would we know As practised in Toronto, Ontario and Canada, the democratic process is so primitive, unevolved and compromised it's barely recognizable. Perhaps it's no surprise in times of growing tribalism that a political system dependant on the goodwill of all involved elected and electors alike should have unravelled to such an extent. A woman heads toward a voting station at Timothy Eaton Memorial Church in 2014, a year when 37 of 38 incumbents were re-elected. Its failures can be seen at every turn; money and media, private interference and public indifference distort the exercise of democracy beyond the point where it can be taken seriously. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

u.s: We are all family on earth, he told reporters, according to Vancouver Courier. How we can co-exist in understanding and peace should be our starting point. Tamaki said he would talk to the U.S. about how the people of Okinawa have rejected the new air base. Tamaki is also emerging as a new kind of leader, standing for tolerance and diversity, in a nation long known for uniformity and conformity. His mother is Okinawan. His father is a U.S. Marine he has never met. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

election explainer: However, mainstream media coverage has fixated overwhelmingly on incumbent John Tory and former chief city planner Jennifer Keesmaat, according to NOW Magazine. Reporting on the Toronto mayoral election as a two-horse race not only anticipates the election's outcome, but fundamentally skews it. Thirty-five candidates have registered to run for mayor of Toronto, including many who have long histories working in and with communities that are consistently marginalized in the city's politics while bearing the brunt of its violence. The Globe and Mail's recent election explainer identifies Tory and Keesmaat as candidates, not even bothering to mention any of the 33 others running. Narcity's list of the 11 most notable people running for mayor of Toronto, meanwhile, features two neo-Nazis James Sears and Chris Brosky alongside Tory and Keesmaat, but no women of colour in the race. The Toronto Star's election promise tracker details Tory's and Keesmaat's pledges on housing, arts and culture, public safety, street safety, taxes and transit, but excludes the positions of all other candidates, including those with far more progressive stances. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

quebec city: Instead of heading to Trois-Rivieres and Quebec City as planned last Monday, he swung well north, shaking hands with supporters in Amos one day and donning safety gear at a construction site in Chibougamau the next, according to National Observer. Legault senses his path to a majority is through dairy-farm and aluminum-smelter country, and this final push to remote ridings reflected a confidence not seen since the early days of the campaign. As the 39-day campaign dragged on, Legault saw his lead evaporate to the point where polls showed the Coalition tied with Philippe Couillard's incumbent Liberals a week out from Monday's election. ; Then something changed. I think the majority will come from the regions, he told reporters earlier in the week. When Mr. And I think the regions, when you look at the results, they didn't have good results from the Liberal government. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

stage presence: He sang to sold-out concert halls into his 90s and said he wrote every single day, according to Vancouver Courier. I throw most of it away. Known as France's Frank Sinatra, the dapper crooner and actor, who got his start as a songwriter and protege of Edith Piaf, died Monday at 94.article continues below Trending Stories Interview sheds light on Ian Campbell's exit from Vancouver mayor race Where do our plastics go And how do we get rid of them Vancouver High on Life vloggers die in Shannon Falls tragedy Lobby group calls on province to adopt rideshare immediately His versatile tenor, lush lyrics and kinetic stage presence endeared himself to fans the world over, but nowhere more so than in France. You write first, judge later, he said in a 2015 interview before the release of the album Encores. Like her, his fame ultimately reached well outside France, including being awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2017. Often compared to Sinatra, Aznavour started his career as a songwriter for Piaf, but it was she who took him under her wing, encouraging him to sing his own material. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

david hulchanski: U of T professor David Hulchanski has done a lot of work on the city's demographics, especially relating to income, according to Toronto Star. Colin McConnell / Toronto Star file photo The new charts come from University of Toronto Prof. New demographic charts show a strikingly segregated city, with visible minorities concentrated in low-income neighbourhoods and white residents dominating affluent areas in numbers far higher than their share of the population. David Hulchanski and his research team, known for using census data to illustrate growing income inequality in the city. It's starker than we would expect, Hulchanski said in an interview. Their latest effort flags the role of discrimination in that inequality, with lopsided racial breakdowns that surprised the researchers. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

diversity scarborough: This is one in a series of articles, according to Toronto Star. The election is Oct. 22. Now that new legislation has made it a 25-ward election, we have determined all of the wards are worth watching. Advance voting begins Oct. 10. Maggie Chi, running for city council in Ward 23 Scarborough North, says creating programming for young people and seniors in their own first languages will be one of her goals if elected. When Maggie Chi's parents were deciding what part of Canada to live in 15 years ago, they picked a place that was famed, even as far away as China, for its diversity Scarborough. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.