Make no mistake, there were explicit promises to "strengthen" Canadian citizenship both BEFORE and DURING the 2011 campaign. (To be fair, however, it warrants noting that there were major flaws in how the grant citizenship requirements were structured, under the law prior to Bill C-24, and their revision was badly needed, literally begged for by many Federal Court Justices going back more than a decade. Virtually everyone agreed changes were necessary. Big disagreements at the time over the nature and extent of what those changes should be.)How much hint was there about C-24 in the 2011 Harper campaign?
Harper's government actually had tabled a Bill containing changes to the Citizenship Act several YEARS before tabling and adopting Bill C-24, but was a minority government at the time and the Bill was not adopted. Explicit promises (no mere "hint") to carry through on earlier promises to make changes to "strengthen" Canadian citizenship were a key part of the 2011 Harper campaign. Over the course of the next TWO YEARS then CIC Minister Jason Kenney gave multiple speeches promising the government would soon table the Bill with promised changes to citizenship. Then when Chris Alexander became CIC Minister he reiterated the Bill to strengthen Canadian citizenship was coming.
As noted before, Bill C-24 was tabled in February 2014, well over two years AFTER explicit campaign promises to "strengthen" Canadian citizenship. It was adopted and received Royal Assent June 19, 2014. Nonetheless, no citizenship application made prior to June 11, 2015 was subject to the change in requirements.
At the time this and other similar forums were rife with the same sort of distortions and misinformation as has been presented here. Which really was a disservice because it was a huge distraction and confused many affected. There were real, serious issues with Harper's Bill C-24 (many of which were subsequently rolled back by Bill C-6 adopted under the Liberal government) but efforts to responsibly address those issues was sidetracked by the exaggerated and misleading rhetoric dominating discussions, which led to a great deal of unnecessary anxiety, more than a little confusion, and thus had the effect of making things more difficult for more than a few.
Which is precisely why I have continued to push back here. Effective advocacy requires a RESPONSIBLE approach to addressing the issues.
Current delays in citizenship processing are indeed a REAL ISSUE. This is an issue worth addressing. Seriously. Responsibly. Intelligently. Appropriately. Tangling this very real problem with totally unfounded threats of an impending change in citizenship requirements that would result in the "return" of pending applications is a DISTRACTION. So much so, which should be so obvious, it warrants questioning the motives of those pushing this agenda.
The fact someone has the "right" to spout nonsense and lies and distortions does not justify polluting public discourse about important subjects.
It appears clear you continue the effort to elevate mere possibility to the status of a feasible prospect as a tool in fear-mongering.The scenario I did is ONE POSSIBILITY. You admitted it yourself, it is a possibility. The question is the possibility or not, not the degree of probability. This outcome no one can guess, unless they have a crystal ball (ironic ... the truth is, it's impossible, all you say will be speculation).
Yes, the realm of politics is tangled in speculation and surprises. Like Erin O'Toole becoming the Conservative party leader. But no crystal ball is necessary to map much if not most of what and where and how various political groups will approach many issues.
It is, after all, *possible* an Erin O'Toole government will revise the Citizenship Act to eliminate testing for knowledge of Canada. But we can dismiss that *possibility* as FAR-FETCHED without much research into either the history of the Conservative Party or O'Toole's personal views, let alone needing a crystal ball. No "guess" necessary.
In particular, this "no one can guess" line is another conflating distraction.
As I have made a concerted effort to illuminate, there is a real concern about continuing lengthy delays. And, again, as anyone with a real background in advocacy and activism knows well, it is important to identify the REAL ISSUES, and to address THOSE REAL ISSUES.Do you want to forbid people to be careful and worry about the indefinite delay?
To my view your bogeyman distortions are what is counter-productive. And a big reason for pushing back.
Again, freedom of speech does not justify spouting nonsense, particularly when it is a distraction from the real issues.