As I've said before, what this particular part of the Bill does is even the playing field and make it fair for everyone. The new rule says that you must reside in Canada as a PR for 4 years before qualifying for citizenship. That is the same rule for everyone, regardless of which program they became a PR through. No exceptions, no short cuts, no qualifications. It seems like a fair and sensible approach to me.MrB said:The main concern for people on this thread is the proposed bill not considering pre-PR times. It is true that some people are out only for themselves but the core of the petition is for the collective good. Please if you don't mind educating us, how does eliminating pre-PR times benefit Canada in the long run or strengthen the integrity of the immigration system. You tend to forget that those at the helm of the bill are politicians not poets, neither are they activists. They have a political agenda and would go to any extent to manifest it, even if constitutes lying to the public and passing a bill with xenophobic undertones.
You can argue that someone who was a student and then worked here before qualifying is more Canadian than someone who just arrived. But by that logic, you can also say that the student/worker is Canadian enough to be a citizen. Why even bother going through the PR process at all? Or alternatively, a worker is more integrated into regular Canadian society than a student who is still fairly sheltered in a university environment. So then, should employment time carry more weight than time spent studying? I strongly believe that it makes sense to eliminate all the nonsense and have one standard rule for everyone.
As for the politicians lying, etc. I'm well aware of that. But, so did the Liberals, while shamelessly opened Canada's border and had no controls over the immigration system at all. Politicians will always be politicians.