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Citizenship test: Collective action required, or expect endless delays, years. Example of the effective lobbyng of people awaiting spousal sponsorship

DejavuCA

Star Member
Jun 17, 2021
108
87
I totally understand I have been bashed here many times and I know the anger and frustration but just let it go. IRCC took a great portion of many people lives but they dont care they are above the law. You can contact MP but doesnt matter it's a waste of time mp cant do shit.There is no forum where u can complain against IRCC. In Canadian constitution they say no one is above the law but IRCC is above the law. Instead of protesting go to federal court . Let's see what right the court gives u. They say Canada is a human rights champion who speaks on rights for the entire world. Go to the court. as proof you can show to the court how much frustrated everyone is . There is no accountability.
Yeah man.. Literally just staring at the wall at this moment and just lost. Will try to shut my brain off at this moment and continue looking for some answers tomorrow. New day.. New hope. If we don’t try, we won’t win. We are all in this together.
 

piotrqc

Hero Member
Aug 10, 2020
391
451
I think that the results of the September 20 elections will have a major impact on the subject that concerns us. I explain myself.

It is interesting to follow the news regularly posted on the site of the Union of Public Service Workers of Canada, like the link I posted above ... Their positions constantly change according to the rhythm of the news and their impact on their direct interests ... For example their defense of vacation code 699, the directive of the secretariat of the treasury board of Canada to limit the abuse of honest worker and taxpayer money through the unjustified code 699, the union's position to contest the directive before the tribuneaux ...

Then finally their half-hearted opposition against the compulsory vaccination of federal workers ... And now the latter communicates which dates from today, or they very openly criticize O'toole, because he promises to make budget cuts in the public service .... = Fewer positions in the federal administration = They suddenly forgot their fierce (and shameful) defense of the 699 code.

I remain convinced that a victory for O'toole, even a minority, would be catastrophic for us, as I have already expressed rather in this topic: There will be a risk of slowing down the processing of our files, and even of a change of retroactive rules and feedback from our application envelopes ... (This has already happened in the past for other programs for permanent residence).

I also know that several people are angry with liberals because of these disproportionate and unjustified delays in the processing of our requests ... But you should know that we do not have `` the luxury '' of wanting the victory of the conservatives, it would be a disaster for us ...

Last points, for all those who, from the beginning, wanted to discourage us from making our "geremiads", and who clearly alluded that we must be grateful to be here, and not to make any demands or forms of protest. ..

I would like to tell them that we ended up attracting attention ... I recently saw an election poster drawn from the libereaux program ... where they promise, among other things, to remove the fees for citizenship ... But above all or they undertake to return to processing times of less than 12 months, time limits '' before covid '', the poster that I saw said exactly that in French, word by word ...
 

freediagram

Star Member
May 24, 2016
74
68
Whatever happpens vote for CONSERVATIVES. Make Canada Great Again !
Man I really don't want to comment on politics here but this rhetoric of bringing lame US political slogans to Canada is just so out of whack and stale. You think you look cool but you just look so out of place. I just hope to god what happened in the US in the last few years won't ever happen in Canada. I wish I could vote to play a small role not to let conservatives come to power. I'm not going to continue commenting on politics; I have been waiting since April 2019 and as much as I despise what has happened to IRCC post covid, I believe it would have been same or probably worse under conservative. All they want to do is to make the government as small and ineffective as possible and sell out to big corporations. Look at the US government catastrophic response to covid in 2020.
I just didn't want a few people from or influenced by politics south of the border dominate the discourse here.
Ok.. back to checking status of my application everyday.
 

luvtrump

Champion Member
Dec 21, 2020
1,340
876
Man I really don't want to comment on politics here but this rhetoric of bringing lame US political slogans to Canada is just so out of whack and stale. You think you look cool but you just look so out of place. I just hope to god what happened in the US in the last few years won't ever happen in Canada. I wish I could vote to play a small role not to let conservatives come to power. I'm not going to continue commenting on politics; I have been waiting since April 2019 and as much as I despise what has happened to IRCC post covid, I believe it would have been same or probably worse under conservative. All they want to do is to make the government as small and ineffective as possible and sell out to big corporations. Look at the US government catastrophic response to covid in 2020.
I just didn't want a few people from or influenced by politics south of the border dominate the discourse here.
Ok.. back to checking status of my application everyday.
Wanna Fix IRCC use O Toole the best tool. Vote Conservatives. Make Canada Great Again.

Back to checking my status and see In process every day.
 

dpenabill

VIP Member
Apr 2, 2010
6,436
3,183
Man I really don't want to comment on politics here but this rhetoric of bringing lame US political slogans to Canada is just so out of whack and stale. You think you look cool but you just look so out of place. I just hope to god what happened in the US in the last few years won't ever happen in Canada. I wish I could vote to play a small role not to let conservatives come to power. I'm not going to continue commenting on politics; I have been waiting since April 2019 and as much as I despise what has happened to IRCC post covid, I believe it would have been same or probably worse under conservative. All they want to do is to make the government as small and ineffective as possible and sell out to big corporations. Look at the US government catastrophic response to covid in 2020.
I just didn't want a few people from or influenced by politics south of the border dominate the discourse here.
Ok.. back to checking status of my application everyday.
Reminder: there is more than a little trolling going on here . . . easy enough to spot the troll, they post things like "to go up, go down." Further explanation should not be necessary. Ostracization appropriate (usually no need to respond to trolling).

As usual, I will be voting strategically (this will be the third Federal election I vote in), which happens to be for the party that generally provides the best support for immigrants . . . my preference, however, is for the NDP, which historically has usually been the front runner in my riding, up until the first election in which I could vote when strategic voting became more of an imperative in Canada (there is no doubt, none whatsoever, that a Conservative government is the WORST outcome for immigrants, and for most Canadians generally). While the NDP has some MPs (such as Jenny Kwan) who are strong supporters of immigrants, as a party the conflict between labour union interests and some immigration policies results in some platform compromises that do not support immigrants as uniformly as the Liberals.
 

luvtrump

Champion Member
Dec 21, 2020
1,340
876
Reminder: there is more than a little trolling going on here . . . easy enough to spot the troll, they post things like "to go up, go down." Further explanation should not be necessary. Ostracization appropriate (usually no need to respond to trolling).

As usual, I will be voting strategically (this will be the third Federal election I vote in), which happens to be for the party that generally provides the best support for immigrants . . . my preference, however, is for the NDP, which historically has usually been the front runner in my riding, up until the first election in which I could vote when strategic voting became more of an imperative in Canada (there is no doubt, none whatsoever, that a Conservative government is the WORST outcome for immigrants, and for most Canadians generally). While the NDP has some MPs (such as Jenny Kwan) who are strong supporters of immigrants, as a party the conflict between labour union interests and some immigration policies results in some platform compromises that do not support immigrants as uniformly as the Liberals.
Hahahaha we all know Conservatives are going to win. You can go vote for NDP . It's still on 3rd .
 

anton1990

Champion Member
Dec 22, 2015
1,752
574
34
North Battleford
Category........
PNP
Visa Office......
Sydney, NS
NOC Code......
2171
Job Offer........
Yes
App. Filed.......
14-04-2016
Nomination.....
21-04-2016
AOR Received.
11-07-2016
Med's Request
02-05-2017
Med's Done....
09-05-2017
Passport Req..
08-12-2017
VISA ISSUED...
20-12-2017
LANDED..........
14-01-2018
Reminder: there is more than a little trolling going on here . . . easy enough to spot the troll, they post things like "to go up, go down." Further explanation should not be necessary. Ostracization appropriate (usually no need to respond to trolling).

As usual, I will be voting strategically (this will be the third Federal election I vote in), which happens to be for the party that generally provides the best support for immigrants . . . my preference, however, is for the NDP, which historically has usually been the front runner in my riding, up until the first election in which I could vote when strategic voting became more of an imperative in Canada (there is no doubt, none whatsoever, that a Conservative government is the WORST outcome for immigrants, and for most Canadians generally). While the NDP has some MPs (such as Jenny Kwan) who are strong supporters of immigrants, as a party the conflict between labour union interests and some immigration policies results in some platform compromises that do not support immigrants as uniformly as the Liberals.
Bullsh*t NDP Propaganda...............Do u have a proof that NDP is better for immigrants? Do u have a proof that Conservative is worst for immigrants or Canadians?

Please answer
 

dpenabill

VIP Member
Apr 2, 2010
6,436
3,183
Bullsh*t NDP Propaganda...............Do u have a proof that NDP is better for immigrants? Do u have a proof that Conservative is worst for immigrants or Canadians?

Please answer
I am not sure whether this is a sincere query or not (this is one of those threads which tends to be more infected by trolling). Not just because it is hard to imagine anyone seriously contesting just how anti-immigrant the Conservative Party is, but especially considering the mischaracterization the query is premised on. I did NOT say that the "NDP is better for immigrants." In fact I said:
While the NDP has some MPs (such as Jenny Kwan) who are strong supporters of immigrants, as a party the conflict between labour union interests and some immigration policies results in some platform compromises that do not support immigrants as uniformly as the Liberals.

So no, I cannot prove what is contrary to what I said.

If you claim to be looking for evidence that the Conservative Party is the worst, I will concede that I am not sufficiently familiar with the Bloc Québécois history or current platform in regards to immigration policies to prove which is actually the absolute worst. I would note, however, that in many ridings where there is a Bloc Québécois candidate, voting Bloc Québécois likely amounts to an anti-immigrant vote because it increases the chances of a Conservative government. My not-all-that-well-informed (never seen a Bloc Québécois candidate on the ballot in the riding where I live or in any riding within a thousand km of here) impression is that as a more or less nationalist party the Bloc Québécois is probably at least as anti-immigrant as the Conservative Party.

Frankly, if you are challenging the characterization of the Conservative Party as the more or less anti-immigrant party compared to the Liberals or the NDP, that suggests the query is not sincere. That is in the vein of asserting "to go up, go down," given how utterly obvious this is.

While it hardly tells the whole story, and was published early this year before the season for making campaign promises began in earnest, the National Post (rarely kind let alone favourable to the Liberals) noted polls indicating:
. . . that those who identified themselves as Liberal supporters are much more supportive of immigration than self-identified Conservatives. According to the same EKOS poll, only 15 per cent of Liberals thought Canada was admitting too many members of visible minorities as new immigrants, while a whopping 69 per cent of Conservatives thought so.
. . . members of the Conservative base are not just socially conservative but many have an antipathy to increasing numbers of immigration of visible minorities to Canada.

It warrants noting that O'Toole has been making claims contrary to what he has historically advocated and contrary to what the Conservative Party has advocated and will almost certainly continue to advocate when it comes to actually governing. Language in the current Conservative Party platform referring to improving "fairness" in immigration proceedings echoes the meaning of "fair and balanced" in some U.S. media, which is oriented to what is fair for certain people . . . example, the Conservative Party wants to implement expedited immigration services for those who will pay extra. Fair for those with more money. Not really fair. Not close (especially not for families).

The membership of the Conservative Party itself embraces profoundly conflicting attitudes toward immigration and immigrants, much of their constituency rather militantly anti-immigrant, while among the leadership there is a recognition that certain types of immigration, focused on importing cheap labour, need to be supported in order to tip the economic balance in favour of big business. The more militant anti-immigrant members of the Conservative Party tend to be concentrated in Alberta. The members looking at how immigration can be a boon for big business tend to be concentrated in Ontario. Of course generalizations tend to unfairly paint some, and not all those driving the party these days are derived from the Jason Kenney camp, but the sheep's clothing should not be fooling anyone.

Politics has always been beleaguered with empty promises, but in recent years the gap between truth and lies, honesty and deception, has grown more pernicious and pervasive than I recall in the history of modern governments in the West.

Some say, and I at least partially agree, do not focus on what they say, watch what they do. So some real history may be illuminating:

Immigration path for Permanent Residency:
-- Conservatives let applications fall further and further into backlog and then abruptly, and not legally, terminated all skilled worker PR applications and told prospective economic class applicants to start over; since that was illegal, knocked down by the courts, Kenney's Parliament rammed through legislation to retroactively close all skilled worker applications​
-- Liberals have consistently increased numbers year after year​

Physical Presence Requirements for grant of citizenship:
Minimum presence in Canada:​
-- Conservatives implement a four year minimum presence requirement; minimum ratio: 66% (4/6 rule)​
-- Liberals revised the law to adopt a three year requirement; minimum ratio: 60% (3/5 rule)​
Pre-PR credit:​
-- Conservatives revised law to give NO credit for time in Canada prior to becoming a PR​
-- Liberals revised the law to give up to one year credit for time in Canada prior to becoming a PR​

Language and knowledge requirements for citizenship:
-- Conservatives adopted law requiring some children and all adults up to the age of 65 to meet language and knowledge of Canada requirements​
-- Liberals revised the law to not require children (immigrants under 18 at the time of making the application) or adults aged 55 or older to meet language and knowledge of Canada requirements​

Forced residency in Canada after applying:
-- Conservatives adopted an "intent to reside" requirement, which provided grounds for rejecting any citizenship applicant who was determined to be living outside Canada after applying​
-- Liberals immediately ceased enforcing that requirement and proceeded to repeal it​

Revocation of PR status:
-- Conservatives expanded grounds for revoking PR status and applied these retroactively (complicated issue involving refugees who become PRs -- see discussion elsewhere in this forum)​
-- Liberals, unfortunately, have done nothing to reverse the egregious injustices inflicted under the Conservative provision; NDP MP Jenny Kwan is among the very few who have made an effort to undue the harm inflicted by the Conservatives​

Grounds for revoking citizenship:
-- Conservatives adopted provisions for revoking citizenship validly obtained (even citizenship by birth) based on certain crimes; this was part of the Conservative governments much expanded policy to pursue revocation of citizenship generally​
-- Liberals repealed the provisions which would allow the government to revoke citizenship based on criminal acts, reestablishing misrepresentation/fraud as the only grounds for revoking citizenship​

RQ-related non-routine processing of citizenship applicants:
-- Conservatives implemented (OB-407) strict criteria for issuing RQ, which included full blown RQ issued to applicants for things like having a drivers license issued less than three months prior to applying for citizenship; being self-employed, employed as a consultant, or unemployed; during one period of time soon after Kenney obtained a majority government the Conservative government was issuing RQ to as many as one in four citizenship applicants​
-- Discussions about RQ in this forum since 2016, since there has been a Liberal government, have dwindled to a trickle; it is readily apparent that this government is not abusing the RQ procedure the way it had been under the Conservatives​

Current Conservative promises, much of which are NOT actually part of their platform but rather are rhetorical talking-points (typically using terms lacking substance . . . like "fair" and "accountability" and "welcoming" (talk about BS, that one is major BS coming from the Conservatives), do not reflect who the Conservative Parties have been in Canada and are not at all an indication of who they will be.

My political leaning toward the NDP, if and when there might be some chance of them resuming a major role in government (they have never formed the Federal government), derives from many additional factors and preferences; as some might discern, I lean to the left of the socialists. I am not a one-issue voter. But all that is beside the point here.

Homework done. FWIW.
 
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rajkamalmohanram

VIP Member
Apr 29, 2015
15,803
5,787
I am not sure whether this is a sincere query or not (this is one of those threads which tends to be more infected by trolling). Not just because it is hard to imagine anyone seriously contesting just how anti-immigrant the Conservative Party is, but especially considering the mischaracterization the query is premised on. I did NOT say that the "NDP is better for immigrants." In fact I said:
While the NDP has some MPs (such as Jenny Kwan) who are strong supporters of immigrants, as a party the conflict between labour union interests and some immigration policies results in some platform compromises that do not support immigrants as uniformly as the Liberals.

So no, I cannot prove what is contrary to what I said.

If you claim to be looking for evidence that the Conservative Party is the worst, I will concede that I am not sufficiently familiar with the Bloc Québécois history or current platform in regards to immigration policies to prove which is actually the absolute worst. I would note, however, that in many ridings where there is a Bloc Québécois candidate, voting Bloc Québécois likely amounts to an anti-immigrant vote because it increases the chances of a Conservative government. My not-all-that-well-informed (never seen a Bloc Québécois candidate on the ballot in the riding where I live or in any riding within a thousand km of here) impression is that as a more or less nationalist party the Bloc Québécois is probably at least as anti-immigrant as the Conservative Party.

Frankly, if you are challenging the characterization of the Conservative Party as the more or less anti-immigrant party compared to the Liberals or the NDP, that suggests the query is not sincere. That is in the vein of asserting "to go up, go down," given how utterly obvious this is.

While it hardly tells the whole story, and was published early this year before the season for making campaign promises began in earnest, the National Post (rarely kind let alone favourable to the Liberals) noted polls indicating:
. . . that those who identified themselves as Liberal supporters are much more supportive of immigration than self-identified Conservatives. According to the same EKOS poll, only 15 per cent of Liberals thought Canada was admitting too many members of visible minorities as new immigrants, while a whopping 69 per cent of Conservatives thought so.
. . . members of the Conservative base are not just socially conservative but many have an antipathy to increasing numbers of immigration of visible minorities to Canada.

It warrants noting that O'Toole has been making claims contrary to what he has historically advocated and contrary to what the Conservative Party has advocated and will almost certainly continue to advocate when it comes to actually governing. Language in the current Conservative Party platform referring to improving "fairness" in immigration proceedings echoes the meaning of "fair and balanced" in some U.S. media, which is oriented to what is fair for certain people . . . example, the Conservative Party wants to implement expedited immigration services for those who will pay extra. Fair for those with more money. Not really fair. Not close (especially not for families).

The membership of the Conservative Party itself embraces profoundly conflicting attitudes toward immigration and immigrants, much of their constituency rather militantly anti-immigrant, while among the leadership there is a recognition that certain types of immigration, focused on importing cheap labour, need to be supported in order to tip the economic balance in favour of big business. The more militant anti-immigrant members of the Conservative Party tend to be concentrated in Alberta. The members looking at how immigration can be a boon for big business tend to be concentrated in Ontario. Of course generalizations tend to unfairly paint some, and not all those driving the party these days are derived from the Jason Kenney camp, but the sheep's clothing should not be fooling anyone.

Politics has always been beleaguered with empty promises, but in recent years the gap between truth and lies, honesty and deception, has grown more pernicious and pervasive than I recall in the history of modern governments in the West.

Some say, and I at least partially agree, do not focus on what they say, watch what they do. So some real history may be illuminating:

Immigration path for Permanent Residency:
-- Conservatives let applications fall further and further into backlog and then abruptly, and not legally, terminated all skilled worker PR applications and told prospective economic class applicants to start over; since that was illegal, knocked down by the courts, Kenney's Parliament rammed through legislation to retroactively close all skilled worker applications​
-- Liberals have consistently increased numbers year after year​

Physical Presence Requirements for grant of citizenship:
Minimum presence in Canada:​
-- Conservatives implement a four year minimum presence requirement; minimum ratio: 66% (4/6 rule)​
-- Liberals revised the law to adopt a three year requirement; minimum ratio: 60% (3/5 rule)​
Pre-PR credit:​
-- Conservatives revised law to give NO credit for time in Canada prior to becoming a PR​
-- Liberals revised the law to give up to one year credit for time in Canada prior to becoming a PR​

Language and knowledge requirements for citizenship:
-- Conservatives adopted law requiring some children and all adults up to the age of 65 to meet language and knowledge of Canada requirements​
-- Liberals revised the law to not require children (immigrants under 18 at the time of making the application) or adults aged 55 or older to meet language and knowledge of Canada requirements​

Forced residency in Canada after applying:
-- Conservatives adopted an "intent to reside" requirement, which provided grounds for rejecting any citizenship applicant who was determined to be living outside Canada after applying​
-- Liberals immediately ceased enforcing that requirement and proceeded to repeal it​

Revocation of PR status:
-- Conservatives expanded grounds for revoking PR status and applied these retroactively (complicated issue involving refugees who become PRs -- see discussion elsewhere in this forum)​
-- Liberals, unfortunately, have done nothing to reverse the egregious injustices inflicted under the Conservative provision; NDP MP Jenny Kwan is among the very few who have made an effort to undue the harm inflicted by the Conservatives​

Grounds for revoking citizenship:
-- Conservatives adopted provisions for revoking citizenship validly obtained (even citizenship by birth) based on certain crimes; this was part of the Conservative governments much expanded policy to pursue revocation of citizenship generally​
-- Liberals repealed the provisions which would allow the government to revoke citizenship based on criminal acts, reestablishing misrepresentation/fraud as the only grounds for revoking citizenship​

RQ-related non-routine processing of citizenship applicants:
-- Conservatives implemented (OB-407) strict criteria for issuing RQ, which included full blown RQ issued to applicants for things like having a drivers license issued less than three months prior to applying for citizenship; being self-employed, employed as a consultant, or unemployed; during one period of time soon after Kenney obtained a majority government the Conservative government was issuing RQ to as many as one in four citizenship applicants​
-- Discussions about RQ in this forum since 2016, since there has been a Liberal government, have dwindled to a trickle; it is readily apparent that this government is not abusing the RQ procedure the way it had been under the Conservatives​

Current Conservative promises, much of which are NOT actually part of their platform but rather are rhetorical talking-points (typically using terms lacking substance . . . like "fair" and "accountability" and "welcoming" (talk about BS, that one is major BS coming from the Conservatives), do not reflect who the Conservative Parties have been in Canada and are not at all an indication of who they will be.

My political leaning toward the NDP, if and when there might be some chance of them resuming a major role in government (they have never formed the Federal government), derives from many additional factors and preferences; as some might discern, I lean to the left of the socialists. I am not a one-issue voter. But all that is beside the point here.

Homework done. FWIW.
I do see some posts from applicants who have been waiting for a while now and think voting for conservatives will somehow help with the backlog. I don't usually discuss politics but IMO, I think the items you've listed do show that if they've been waiting for a while and think the conservatives can somehow help the backlog or relax immigration rules/timelines, they might be betting on the wrong horse.