Frontier Centre for Public Policy
Carney Risks Repeating Trudeau’s Immigration Failures
From the Frontier Centre for Public Policy
Canada is not and never has been anti-immigrant. Immigration built this country, and it will continue to do so. But immigration policy must serve the national interest, not overwhelm it.
Canadians want Carney to abandon Trudeau’s failed immigration model and set immigration at a pace Canada can sustain
Canada is buckling under the weight of unsustainable immigration levels, and Prime Minister Marc Carney’s early decisions suggest he plans to keep following Justin Trudeau’s failed path.
Carney’s recent plan to bring in thousands of elderly retirees from India raises an obvious question. No disrespect is intended toward India or those retirees, but Canadians are asking how this serves their interests. Our hospitals are overcrowded, our housing market is out of reach for young families, and our social services are under immense strain. Adding more retirees will increase the pressure on already strained systems.
Many had hoped Carney would pivot from Trudeau’s disastrous policies. Instead, he appears set to double down.
Under Trudeau, housing construction lagged badly, with only about 200,000 homes built each year while the population grew by nearly a million. When nearly a million newcomers arrive each year but only 200,000 homes are built, the math simply doesn’t work.
The result was skyrocketing rents, collapsing affordability, and young Canadians watching the dream of home ownership slip away. Health care, education and other public services were swamped. The crisis Carney has inherited is severe; his early moves suggest he may only deepen it.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has given voice to what most Canadians already believe: the pace of immigration must be slowed. As he put it, “We need to ensure that more leave than come in over the next couple of years, while we catch up, while housing, health care and jobs can catch up.” That is not radical. It is common sense.
Canada is not and never has been anti-immigrant. Immigration built this country, and it will continue to do so. But immigration policy must serve the national interest, not overwhelm it.
For nearly 150 years, Canada followed a clear consensus: newcomers were welcomed in sustainable numbers, chosen for their ability to contribute, and integrated into Canadian life. That model admitted fewer people overall, prioritized skilled workers, and required language ability and proof of economic contribution. It made Canada one of the most successful immigrant societies in the world.
Trudeau shattered that consensus. In 2017, seeking to posture against Donald Trump, he tweeted that Canada welcomed anyone, anywhere, no questions asked.
They came, many through unofficial crossings such as Roxham Road, a small rural road south of Montreal that became the country’s busiest irregular entry point.
The Safe Third Country Agreement requires refugees to claim asylum in the first safe country they enter, but it applied only at official crossings, not irregular ones like Roxham Road. As a result, Canada was required to process all asylum claims made there.
Others arrived as “students” or “temporary workers,” often with limited verification of their claims. Tens of thousands entered outside the regular application process, ahead of applicants waiting abroad who had spent years preparing careful applications.
The costs are now undeniable. Services are collapsing under the strain. Housing affordability is at historic lows. Social cohesion is fraying, with growing frustration spilling onto social media.
Canadians who question policy are often dismissed as “far right,” stifling legitimate debate and ignoring the very real damage being done to their quality of life.
Carney now faces a clear choice. He can continue Trudeau’s reckless course, or he can restore the balanced immigration system that served Canada so well for generations.
He does not need to reinvent the wheel. The pre-2015 model showed that a nation can welcome newcomers generously while protecting its own social fabric. That model worked because it respected limits. A country must control its borders, carefully vet entrants, and admit only as many as it can realistically absorb.
The lesson is simple: numbers matter. Without a return to sustainable immigration levels, Canada’s health care, housing and education systems will continue to buckle, and the trust of Canadians in their leaders will erode further.
The longer we delay, the harder it will be to repair the damage. Young families already priced out of the housing market cannot wait another decade for relief. Hospitals already running at capacity cannot handle more unchecked demand.
Carney talks about being willing to pivot. Immigration is where he must prove it. Canadians are not asking for closed doors. They are asking for control, balance and common sense.
If he delivers, Canada can remain a country that welcomes newcomers while protecting the services and opportunities that make this nation attractive in the first place.
If Carney fails, the Canada we pass to our children won’t be the country we once knew.
Brian Giesbrecht is a retired judge and a senior fellow at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.
Business
Is Carney Falling Into The Same Fiscal Traps As Trudeau?
From the Frontier Centre for Public Policy
By Jay Goldberg
Rosy projections, chronic deficits, and opaque budgeting. If nothing changes, Carney’s credibility could collapse under the same weight.
Carney promised a fresh start. His budget makes it look like we’re still stuck with the same old Trudeau playbook
It turns out the Trudeau government really did look at Canada’s economy through rose-coloured glasses. Is the Carney government falling into the same pattern?
New research from the Frontier Centre for Public Policy shows that federal budgets during the Trudeau years “consistently overestimated [Canada’s] fiscal health” when it came to forecasting the state of the nation’s economy and finances over the long term.
In his research, policy analyst Conrad Eder finds that, when looking specifically at projections of where the economy would be four years out, Trudeau-era budgets tended to have forecast errors of four per cent of nominal GDP, or an average of $94.4 billion.
Because budgets were so much more optimistic about long-term growth, they consistently projected that government revenue would grow at a much faster pace. The Trudeau government then made spending commitments, assuming the money would be there. And when the forecasts did not keep up, deficits simply grew.
As Eder writes, “these dramatic discrepancies illustrate how the Trudeau government’s longer-term projections consistently underestimated the persistence of fiscal challenges and overestimated its ability to improve the budgetary balance.”
Eder concludes that politics came into play and influenced how the Trudeau government framed its forecasts. Rather than focusing on the long-term health of Canada’s finances, the Trudeau government was focused on politics. But presenting overly optimistic forecasts has long-term consequences.
“When official projections consistently deviate from actual outcomes, they obscure the scope of deficits, inhibit effective fiscal planning, and mislead policymakers and the public,” Eder writes.
“This disconnect between projected and actual fiscal outcomes undermines the reliability of long-term planning tools and erodes public confidence in the government’s fiscal management.”
The public’s confidence in the Trudeau government’s fiscal management was so low, in fact, that by the end of 2024 the Liberals were polling in the high teens, behind the NDP.
The key to the Liberal Party’s electoral survival became twofold: the “elbows up” rhetoric in response to the Trump administration’s tariffs, and the choice of a new leader who seemed to have significant credibility and was disconnected from the fiscal blunders of the Trudeau years.
Mark Carney was recruited to run for the Liberal leadership as the antidote to Trudeau. His résumé as governor of the Bank of Canada during the Great Recession and his subsequent years leading the Bank of England seemed to offer Canadians the opposite of the fiscal inexperience of the Trudeau years.
These two factors together helped turn around the Liberals’ fortunes and secured the party a fourth straight mandate in April’s elections.
But now Carney has presented a budget of his own, and it too spills a lot of red ink.
This year’s deficit is projected to be a stunning $78.3 billion, and the federal deficit is expected to stay over $50 billion for at least the next four years.
The fiscal picture presented by Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne was a bleak one.
What remains to be seen is whether the chronic politicking over long-term forecasts that plagued the Trudeau government will continue to be a feature of the Carney regime.
As bad as the deficit figures look now, one has to wonder, given Eder’s research, whether the state of Canada’s finances is even worse than Champagne’s budget lets on.
As Eder says, years of rose-coloured budgeting undermined public trust and misled both policymakers and voters. The question now is whether this approach to the federal budget continues under Carney at the helm.
Budget 2025 significantly revises the economic growth projections found in the 2024 fall economic statement for both 2025 and 2026. However, the forecasts for 2027, 2028 and 2029 were left largely unchanged.
If Eder is right, and the Liberals are overly optimistic when it comes to four-year forecasts, then the 2025 budget should worry Canadians. Why? Because the Carney government did not change the Trudeau government’s 2029 economic projections by even a fraction of a per cent.
In other words, despite the gloomy fiscal numbers found in Budget 2025, the Carney government may still be wearing the same rose-coloured budgeting glasses as the Trudeau government did, at least when it comes to long-range fiscal planning.
If the Carney government wants to have more credibility than the Trudeau government over the long term, it needs to be more transparent about how long-term economic projections are made and be clear about whether the Finance Department’s approach to forecasting has changed with the government. Otherwise, Carney’s fiscal credibility, despite his résumé, may meet the same fate as Trudeau’s.
Jay Goldberg is a fellow with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.
Censorship Industrial Complex
A Democracy That Can’t Take A Joke Won’t Tolerate Dissent
From the Frontier Centre for Public Policy
By Collin May
Targeting comedians is a sign of political insecurity
A democracy that fears its comedians is a democracy in trouble. That truth landed hard when Graham Linehan, the Irish writer behind Father Ted and The IT Crowd, stepped off a plane at Heathrow on Sept. 1, 2025, and was met by five London Metropolitan Police officers ready to arrest him for three posts on X.
Returning to the UK from Arizona, he was taken into custody on the charge of “suspicion of inciting violence”, an allegation levelled with increasing ease in an age wary of offence. His actual “crime” amounted to three posts, the most contentious being a joke about trans-identified men in exclusively female spaces and a suggestion that violated women respond with a swift blow to a very sensitive part of the male’s not-yet-physically-transitioned anatomy.
The reaction to Linehan’s arrest, from J.K. Rowling to a wide array of commentators, was unqualified condemnation. Many wondered whether free speech had become a museum piece in the UK. Asked about the incident, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer defended his country’s reputation for free expression but declined to address the arrest itself.
Canada has faced its own pressures on comedic expression. In 2022, comedian Mike Ward saw a 12-year legal saga end when the Supreme Court of Canada ruled five-to-four that the Quebec Human Rights Commission had no jurisdiction to hear a complaint about comments Ward made regarding a disabled Quebec boy. The ruling confirmed that human rights bodies cannot police artistic expression when no discrimination in services or employment has occurred. In that case, comic licence survived narrowly.
These cases reveal a broader trend. Governments and institutions increasingly frame comedy as a risk rather than a social pressure valve. In an environment fixated on avoiding perceived harm, humour becomes an easy and symbolic target. Linehan’s arrest underscores the fragility of free speech, especially in comedic form, in countries that claim to value democratic openness.
Comedy has long occupied an unusual place in public life. One of its earliest literary appearances is in Homer’s Iliad. A common soldier, Thersites, is ugly, sharp-tongued and irreverent. He speaks with a freedom others will not risk, mocking Agamemnon and voicing the frustrations of rank-and-file soldiers. He represents the instinct to puncture pretension. In this sense, comedy and philosophy share a willingness to speak uncomfortable truths that power prefers to avoid.
Aristotle, in his Poetics, noted that tragedy imitates noble actions and depicts people who are to be taken seriously. Comedy, by contrast, imitates those who appear inferior. Yet this lowly status is precisely what gives comedy its political usefulness. It allows performers to say what respectable voices cannot, revealing hypocrisies that formal discourse leaves untouched.
In the Iliad, Thersites does not escape punishment. Odysseus, striving to restore order, strikes him with Agamemnon’s staff, and the soldiers laugh as Thersites is silenced. The scene captures a familiar dynamic. Comedy can expose authority’s flaws, but authority often responds by asserting its dominance. The details shift across history, but the pattern endures.
Modern democracies are showing similar impatience. Comedy provides a way to question conventions without inviting formal conflict. When governments treat jokes as misconduct, they are not protecting the public from harm. They are signalling discomfort with scrutiny. Confident systems do not fear irreverence; insecure ones do.
The growing targeting of comedians matters because it reflects a shift toward institutions that view dissent, even in comedic form, as a liability. Such an approach narrows the space for open dialogue and misunderstands comedy’s role in democratic life. A society confident in itself tolerates mockery because it trusts its citizens to distinguish humour from harm.
In October, the British Crown Prosecution Service announced it would not pursue charges against Linehan. The London Metropolitan Police Service also said it would stop recording “non-crime hate incidents”, a controversial category used to document allegations of hateful behaviour even when no law has been broken. These reversals are welcome, but they do not erase the deeper unease that allowed the arrest to happen.
Comedy survives, but its environment is shifting. In an era where leaders are quick to adopt moral language while avoiding meaningful accountability, humour becomes more necessary, not less. It remains one of the few public tools capable of exposing the distance between political rhetoric and reality.
The danger is that in places where Agamemnon’s folly, leadership driven by pride and insecurity, takes root, those who speak uncomfortable truths may find themselves facing not symbolic correction but formal sanctions. A democracy that begins by targeting its jesters rarely stops there.
Collin May is a Senior Fellow with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, a lawyer, and Adjunct Lecturer in Community Health Sciences at the University of Calgary, with degrees in law (Dalhousie University), a Masters in Theological Studies (Harvard) and a Diplome d’etudes approfondies (Ecole des hautes etudes, Paris).
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