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canada immigration

Significant changes to Canada's immigration and citizenship rules could be on the horizon, with new measures that would grant automatic citizenship to some individuals.

On Thursday, June 5, the federal government announced Bill C-3, a proposal that would expand who gets to pass Canadian citizenship to their children — even if both parent and child were born outside Canada.

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Moving countries can be scary, and if you're a newcomer to Canada, you probably already know just how hard it is to start from scratch.

From looking for jobs and adjusting to the weather, to learning a new language and making new friends, there's a whole list of things you may have to adjust to and figure out after moving to Canada — and that can be hard on anyone.

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The cost of living seems to only know one direction — up — and Canada’s pathway to permanent residency is not excluded. In a move that aligns more with inflation than the spirit of welcoming arms, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) is increasing the fees associated with the permanent resident application.

As of April 30, 2024, applicants will need to meet updated financial requirements, a change dictated by the past two years’ cumulative percentage increase in Canada’s Consumer Price Index.

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Quebec's Institut de la statistique (ISQ) has released its 2022 demographic estimates, showing a nine-month decrease in Quebec life expectancy and the lowest number of births since 2005.

Record-breaking immigration, meanwhile, drove the province's overall population increase of 149,900, to 8.8 million residents. But that growth, representing a rate of 1.7%, lagged behind the 3% year-over-year population increase in the other provinces and territories, the ISQ says.

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ChatGPT: robot, conversation companion, soothsayer. We put the AI model's encyclopedic knowledge and analytical abilities to the test, asking it to list Canada's biggest challenges in the next 50 years. The result was an overview of the social and environmental forces that could fundamentally reshape the country's political and economic landscapes in the decades to come. Among them is "technological disruption" to the labour market. Read: more robots.

Here's ChatGPT's complete, unedited response:

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Premier François Legault is pointing the finger at a six-year-old tweet by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to explain an influx of asylum-seekers.

"To those fleeing persecution, terror & war, Canadians will welcome you, regardless of your faith," the January 2017 tweet reads. "Diversity is our strength."

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Canada unveiled an ambitious plan to welcome tens of thousands of additional permanent residents in the next few years. But the Quebec government, which selects its own immigrants, is standing its ground on its resistance to higher immigration levels.

The federal plan calls for 500,000 new permanent residents nationwide by 2025, a big increase from the record 405,000 in 2021.

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Starting April 30, 2022, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada is increasing Canada permanent resident application fees to adjust for inflation.

The move follows a policy shift in 2020 that allowed IRCC to increase fees every two years to match inflation, the federal department said in an April 5 news release.

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At a press conference on Thursday, Premier François Legault outlined what his government sees as Quebec's priorities for the next federal government following the upcoming Canadian election. Immigration and health care spending were at the top of the list.

First, Legault reiterated his request that the federal government up its health care contribution to "35% of total expenditures." He and other premiers, including Doug Ford, have repeatedly called on the feds to increase their share of spending to take some of the burden off of the provinces.

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