A look at the long-running debate on immigration between Ottawa and Quebec
MONTREAL — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday once again rejected Quebec’s request for additional powers over immigration, following a meeting with Premier François Legault in Montreal. The disagreement between the two leaders is not new: Quebec’s demand for full immigration powers has been part of Legault’s Coalition Avenir Québec platform since 2015.
Here are some of the key elements of the long-running debate.
Shared jurisdiction:
Under the terms of a 1991 deal, Quebec controls the volume of entry for economic immigrants — who comprised about 66 per of permanent immigration to the province in 2022 — but shares responsibility with Ottawa over refugees, newcomers who arrive through the family reunification stream, and temporary foreign workers. Legault’s party has long argued it needs greater control in order to ensure it has the ability to properly integrate newcomers and ensure they learn French.