Let me rephrase in shortdpenabill said:This is what we know about the prospects for revised naturalization requirements:
The Liberal Party platform included an agenda to remove "unfair" hurdles to citizenship and "restore" credit for time living in Canada prior to landing and becoming a PR.
Beyond that, the short version is that any changes are going to take time, a good while if not a long while.
The longer explanation:
The Liberal Party won the election and is now in the process of forming a majority government (Trudeau becomes Prime Minister tomorrow and is expected to name around two dozen members of Cabinet, including the next Minister of CIC), but it will still be at least several more weeks before Parliament is in session.
In the meantime, MPs are extremely busy engaged in just organizational tasks, getting things in order to actually begin governing the country.
The earliest sittings of Parliament will be extremely busy with the basic tasks of governing. Even high priority legislative changes will have to wait until some time next year to so much as be drafted, let alone tabled.
We cannot expect the Liberals to rush legislation through the parliamentary process at the same rate as the Conservatives did these previous four years. Indeed, expect the opposite, a more open process which will engage stake holders and the public, involve more consultations, more debate, more time spent considering alternative proposals and amendments, a more democratic process, which will add up to a significantly longer timeline for a Bill to go from tabled to adopted.
While the Senate rarely stalls legislation for extended time periods, and even more rarely blocks legislation, the Conservatives have a majority in the Senate and are capable of stalling, and may even in some instances outright block legislation. The extent they do so will be a political decision probably directed by the new leadership of the Conservative Party. Anticipate more political posturing relative to high profile Conservative agenda items, which would include Bill C-51, parts of Bill C-24, and Bill C-23; expect the Conservative Senate to hold any legislation affecting these items long enough to publicize negatives, like claims of coddling terrorists, weakening Canadian citizenship, or compromising the electoral system.
Additionally, in the last four years much of the Harper legislation actually was accelerated in its timeline moving through the Senate. That is not at all likely to happen for Liberal legislation. Rather the opposite as noted above. But even the baseline for how long it takes a Bill to proceed through the Senate and back to Parliament will be longer than what we have observed in the last four years.
All of which adds up to it could be a long while before any particular changes are actually made and put into effect. Some may indeed take place in 2016, but many changes will not get done for years.
There are a lot of unknown variables affecting the prospects for revised naturalization requirements:
As noted, the Liberal Party platform included an agenda to remove "unfair" hurdles to citizenship and "restore" credit for time living in Canada prior to landing and becoming a PR.
We do not know what this means in particular. Speculation ranges from eliminating the intent to reside requirement to changing the 4/6 itself, from restoring credit for pre-PR time (was half-credit until June 11, 2015) to implementing a full credit for pre-PR time.
We do not know whether this is a priority item or merely one among the scores of items in the Liberal Platform; thus, we do not know if there is any plan to address these changes sooner or just sometime in the next several years.
Some practical considerations:
Party platforms are oft referred to as "promises," but they are more realistically described as prospective items in the respective Party's agenda, unless they are specifically advocated as a promise. Many such items do not get done, at least not in the four years following the election of a majority government (a higher percentage do not get done if there is a minority government), and many are not done as they are initially proffered. There are many, many reasons why this or that Party platform item does not get done.
There is NO counting on any change taking place until the legislation is actually at least approaching the third reading stage. A lot of legislation gets proposed and tabled, but ends up withering on the vine.
There should be minimal expectation of any particular change taking place until the government has, at the very least, announced that a Bill will be tabled to implement the particular change. Even then, expectation should be tempered until the Bill is actually tabled and reaches, at the least, a second reading.
This will be more true of a Liberal government. The Harper Conservatives ran a different sort of government, using their majority in the House of Parliament and in the Senate to ram legislation through with minimal consultations, minimal debate, virtually no opportunity to consider amendments. Once Harper's government tabled legislation, it was usually planned to follow through and adopt that legislation (not always, they did table some just for political show, especially in the months just before dissolving Parliament). Most indicators suggest a more open democratic process under the Liberals, which will be inherently more cumbersome and less predictable (the cost of being more democratic, a cost well worth paying usually), and again it will take longer. What this means, though, is that expectation for this or that change should be low key until it is more or less clear the legislation is going to actually be adopted and implemented.
In other words, do not be counting chickens before the hen has even met the rooster.
Exactly!sidestep4u said:NO ONE KNOWS WHATS GONNA HAPPEN. JUST NEED TO WAIT AND OBSERVE AS USUAL
dpenabill....my respect...I admire your way of thinking, your presentation style and your language...dpenabill said:This is what we know about the prospects for revised naturalization requirements:
The Liberal Party platform included an agenda to remove "unfair" hurdles to citizenship and "restore" credit for time living in Canada prior to landing and becoming a PR.
Beyond that, the short version is that any changes are going to take time, a good while if not a long while.
The longer explanation:
The Liberal Party won the election and is now in the process of forming a majority government (Trudeau becomes Prime Minister tomorrow and is expected to name around two dozen members of Cabinet, including the next Minister of CIC), but it will still be at least several more weeks before Parliament is in session.
In the meantime, MPs are extremely busy engaged in just organizational tasks, getting things in order to actually begin governing the country.
The earliest sittings of Parliament will be extremely busy with the basic tasks of governing. Even high priority legislative changes will have to wait until some time next year to so much as be drafted, let alone tabled.
We cannot expect the Liberals to rush legislation through the parliamentary process at the same rate as the Conservatives did these previous four years. Indeed, expect the opposite, a more open process which will engage stake holders and the public, involve more consultations, more debate, more time spent considering alternative proposals and amendments, a more democratic process, which will add up to a significantly longer timeline for a Bill to go from tabled to adopted.
While the Senate rarely stalls legislation for extended time periods, and even more rarely blocks legislation, the Conservatives have a majority in the Senate and are capable of stalling, and may even in some instances outright block legislation. The extent they do so will be a political decision probably directed by the new leadership of the Conservative Party. Anticipate more political posturing relative to high profile Conservative agenda items, which would include Bill C-51, parts of Bill C-24, and Bill C-23; expect the Conservative Senate to hold any legislation affecting these items long enough to publicize negatives, like claims of coddling terrorists, weakening Canadian citizenship, or compromising the electoral system.
Additionally, in the last four years much of the Harper legislation actually was accelerated in its timeline moving through the Senate. That is not at all likely to happen for Liberal legislation. Rather the opposite as noted above. But even the baseline for how long it takes a Bill to proceed through the Senate and back to Parliament will be longer than what we have observed in the last four years.
All of which adds up to it could be a long while before any particular changes are actually made and put into effect. Some may indeed take place in 2016, but many changes will not get done for years.
There are a lot of unknown variables affecting the prospects for revised naturalization requirements:
As noted, the Liberal Party platform included an agenda to remove "unfair" hurdles to citizenship and "restore" credit for time living in Canada prior to landing and becoming a PR.
We do not know what this means in particular. Speculation ranges from eliminating the intent to reside requirement to changing the 4/6 itself, from restoring credit for pre-PR time (was half-credit until June 11, 2015) to implementing a full credit for pre-PR time.
We do not know whether this is a priority item or merely one among the scores of items in the Liberal Platform; thus, we do not know if there is any plan to address these changes sooner or just sometime in the next several years.
Some practical considerations:
Party platforms are oft referred to as "promises," but they are more realistically described as prospective items in the respective Party's agenda, unless they are specifically advocated as a promise. Many such items do not get done, at least not in the four years following the election of a majority government (a higher percentage do not get done if there is a minority government), and many are not done as they are initially proffered. There are many, many reasons why this or that Party platform item does not get done.
There is NO counting on any change taking place until the legislation is actually at least approaching the third reading stage. A lot of legislation gets proposed and tabled, but ends up withering on the vine.
There should be minimal expectation of any particular change taking place until the government has, at the very least, announced that a Bill will be tabled to implement the particular change. Even then, expectation should be tempered until the Bill is actually tabled and reaches, at the least, a second reading.
This will be more true of a Liberal government. The Harper Conservatives ran a different sort of government, using their majority in the House of Parliament and in the Senate to ram legislation through with minimal consultations, minimal debate, virtually no opportunity to consider amendments. Once Harper's government tabled legislation, it was usually planned to follow through and adopt that legislation (not always, they did table some just for political show, especially in the months just before dissolving Parliament). Most indicators suggest a more open democratic process under the Liberals, which will be inherently more cumbersome and less predictable (the cost of being more democratic, a cost well worth paying usually), and again it will take longer. What this means, though, is that expectation for this or that change should be low key until it is more or less clear the legislation is going to actually be adopted and implemented.
In other words, do not be counting chickens before the hen has even met the rooster.
Yup. Nice summary.sashali78 said:Let me rephrase in short
"By the time the pre-PR time section of C-24 will be reversed, all those who have been affected by it, would be already citizens anyway"
This is a good point and the most important factor: Trudeau Jr. won't do anything to lose him votes in the next election! Sure if he reverses Pre-PR time towards citizenship, those PR-turned-citizens will vote for him, but the vast majority of Canadians (100% of conservatives, like 60% liberals) won't like it. He sure can do the math!paw339 said:Justin Trudeau will not want to be a one time Prime Minister so imo he will be very careful about repealing laws that are popular with many Canadians. Additionally how the economy performs/unemployment rate will have a huge effect on public attitude to immigration and how the liberals approach changes to the immigration system.
The answer is in the body of the question! From the immigrants and refugees he will bring, and if you still believe the election promises - all the above will happen by the end of this year ;Ditsmyid said:So he promised to bring in more immigrants and refugees, AND reduce the processing time? How's that possible? Where will he get the people needed to process all the additional cases?
He was objecting some parts yes, but you should not forget that he was not the main opposition party. The NDP were doing a good job that time and he was completing this job from the liberal party point of view. Anyway I think it is time now for those who are interested to make changes on the new strengthening citizenship law to take actions. I think we should start with a petition to the new immigration minister. I can not myself wrote a perfect English petition, otherwise I would write a petition to exempt those who landed before 112 June 2015 from 4/6 role and let them apply on the old role 3/4. Those people they were midstream while this law came in effect. It is unfair to change role midstream on them. Also the time credit for those who lived in Canada before becoming PRs, should be restored. Age changes done by this law were u logic to ask a 64 old people to pass exams. If any colleague can give suggestions about the petition I can take the text and register on change.org to publish it,sure I need help to formulate the text. I would appreciate that.ilotey said:youtube.com/watch?v=7UbfsU05YBg
Please see last 20 minutes of this video by new Liberal Immigration Minister John McCallum on which parts of Bill C-24 he does not agree with. From this, it would be logical to infer which sections of the bill he will seek to repeal ...
Yeah, it's John McCallum .ari5323 said:Do we know who is the new Citizen and immigration Minister ?
and whats his story?legend ?
surgi, I absolutely agree with you. A petition should start for the sake of this issue. Please go ahead.surgi said:I think we should start with a petition to the new immigration minister. ....... I would write a petition to exempt those who landed before 112 June 2015 from 4/6 role and let them apply on the old role 3/4. Those people they were midstream while this law came in effect. It is unfair to change role midstream on them. .......
I'm here to help bro.. Where do we start?surgi said:He was objecting some parts yes, but you should not forget that he was not the main opposition party. The NDP were doing a good job that time and he was completing this job from the liberal party point of view. Anyway I think it is time now for those who are interested to make changes on the new strengthening citizenship law to take actions. I think we should start with a petition to the new immigration minister. I can not myself wrote a perfect English petition, otherwise I would write a petition to exempt those who landed before 112 June 2015 from 4/6 role and let them apply on the old role 3/4. Those people they were midstream while this law came in effect. It is unfair to change role midstream on them. Also the time credit for those who lived in Canada before becoming PRs, should be restored. Age changes done by this law were u logic to ask a 64 old people to pass exams. If any colleague can give suggestions about the petition I can take the text and register on change.org to publish it,sure I need help to formulate the text. I would appreciate that.
https://twitter.com/johnmccallumlpcDave01 said:I'm here to help bro.. Where do we start?