Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner is criticizing the immigration department for changing how its datasets are made public, saying it amounts to censorship.
The Conservative shadow immigration minister says the Liberal government has admitted to “purposefully censoring” immigration data published by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).
Public health policy makers, labour force analysts, and housing developers are among those who depend on the IRCC’s immigration data and expect the data to be accurate and timely, Rempel Garner says.
“How many illegal border crossings have we had?” Rempel Garner said. “How many more asylum claims have piled on to an already backlogged waitlist? How many more permits have the Liberals handed out that continue to overwhelm our housing, healthcare system and job market?”
She said Canadians have a right to know immigration numbers, and called on the government to release the data.
She also called on the government to lower immigration levels.
IRCC Response
The IRCC says the reason the most recent immigration data has not yet been published is because the department is currently changing how immigration data is made public.“While monthly data is still available upon request, we are in the process of updating how we share immigration data with Canadians and improving how information is presented online,” IRCC spokesperson Remi Lariviere told The Epoch Times.
The immigration department is seeking to provide Canadians with “clearer explanations of trends and greater context” for data about the IRCC’s programs, Lariviere said.
“As part of this work, we’re updating our web content to make the data more accessible and meaningful,” Lariviere said, adding that the department is committed to transparency, accountability, and client service.
Housing, Unemployment
A June 20 report on a joint study conducted by the IRCC and Statistics Canada indicates that the rise in immigrants arriving in Canada has led to an increase in housing prices.Immigration Caps
In 2024, former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government said it would reduce the number of permanent residents admitted into Canada over the following three years, and announced a cap on the number of international students allowed into the country.Before leaving office, Trudeau pledged to cap the number of temporary residents and workers coming into Canada at 5 percent or less of the country’s population by 2027, which Carney has also agreed to.
Carney said throughout his election campaign that Canada’s immigration system wasn’t working and a cap was needed for “a certain period of time.” In a May mandate letter to his cabinet ministers, Carney said he wanted immigration rates to remain at “sustainable levels.”
Conservative Leader Pierre Poillievre has accused Carney of not taking proper action in reducing immigration numbers, saying the prime minister has so far kept the immigration numbers that Trudeau left behind.







