‘We Made Mistakes’: Canada PM Trudeau Announces 3-Year Cap on Immigration to Fight Migrant ‘Baby Boom’

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This article comes from “infowars.com”

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau admitted his administration “made some mistakes” on its open-border immigration policy and will work to reduce the number of immigrants entering the country over the next three years. 

Trudeau, facing a General Election next year, is under fire for unsustainable immigration policies contributing to housing shortages, inflation, and strained health and transport systems.

The prime minister made the announcement in a video address on Sunday, blaming “big corporations” and “fake colleges” for the massive influx and temporary and permanent migrants.

“In the last two years, our population has grown really fast, like a baby boom…increasingly bad actors like fake colleges and big chain corporations have been exploiting our immigration system for their own interests,” Trudeau said.

“We made some mistakes and that’s why we are taking this big turn,” he explained.

“The goal is to help stabilize population growth while housing stocks catch up, and then to consider gradually increasing immigration rates once again,” Trudeau said, adding that this drawdown will “give our economy and our communities the chance to catch up with things, like our plan to build more homes.”

The major reversal includes reducing the admission of permanent immigrants by 20%, decreasing temporary migrants by approximately 50%, prioritizing permanent residents with healthcare and construction backgrounds, and ending its study visa program that expedites international students, mostly from India.

From NDTV World:

Immigration Minister Marc Miller outlined the government’s plan, which includes admitting approximately 395,000 permanent residents in 2025, a 20% decrease from the previous year. 

The number of temporary immigrants, including international students and foreign workers, will also decrease to around 446,000 in 2025 and 2026, down from 800,000 this year.

Canada’s new immigration plan prioritises permanent residents with skills in healthcare and construction. Trudeau emphasised that the goal is to stabilise population growth while addressing housing shortages and cost-of-living issues. 

Trudeau said Canada’s immigration plan is very “straightforward — lower the number of immigrants — both permanent and temporary.”

The government also ended the popular fast-track study visa program, SDS, which may impact international students, particularly those from India, who make up the largest group of foreign students in Canada.

Trudeau’s announcement, which received 4.7 million views as of this writing, comes too little too late, according to fellow Canadian lawmakers.

“Young individuals will most likely never be able to afford a home in this country because of your failed immigration policy,” wrote Shon Amayev, who works as the press secretary to John Rustad, a member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. “Now that you are on the verge of losing power, you renege. 10 years too late.”

Conservative Party of Canada Leader Pierre Poilievre, who’s challenging Trudeau for the prime ministership in the October 2025 election, wrote on X, “Classic Trudeau: he creates a problem. Then he says he should have solved it sooner. He blames bad actors for immigration problems. No. He is the bad actor.”

People’s Party of Canada Leader Maxime Bernier, who’s also running against Trudeau, likewise wrote, “This clown finally recognizes he f*cked up by allowing millions of foreigners to invade our country. He smeared those of us who raised the alarm as racists until just a few months ago. And now we should believe him when he says he can fix what he broke?? What a joke.”

Quebec Senator Leo Housakos said Trudeau has “broken everything including immigration.”

Trudeau’s approval rating has “deteriorated sharply due to issues related to international relations, the economy, housing, healthcare, and the strength of opposition parties,” according to Political Pulse, reaching their lowest point since he took office in 2015.

The prime minister’s sudden pivot on immigration policy appears to be nothing more than an attempt to curry favor with voters.

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