Wednesday, June 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Senate committee recommends removing immigration measures from border bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Feb, 2026 10:05 AM
  • Senate committee recommends removing immigration measures from border bill

Senators on the social affairs committee wants to see immigration-related sections in the government's border bill, C-12, removed or significantly modified by the Senate national security committee.

The national security committee is responsible for tabling amendments, while the social affairs committee has conducted an in-depth study of the bill's immigration measures.

That report, obtained by The Canadian Press, says the committee heard concerns the legislation contains possible human rights violations, executive powers overreach and lack of procedural fairness.

Bill C-12 proposes barring people who first came to Canada more than a year ago from filing refugee claims and would give the government the power to cancel or modify a host of immigration documents, including permanent residency cards.

The committee's report says if the national security committee opts not to remove the sections on immigration, it should introduce more robust parliamentary oversight to the law and include a sunset clause to require a parliamentary review.

The Senate national security committee will conduct a clause-by-clause study of the bill today, during which amendments can be introduced.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

Commander says RCAF is on a 'path of growth' in 2026

Commander says RCAF is on a 'path of growth' in 2026
The head of the Royal Canadian Air Force has only been in the job for half a year — but it's been an eventful period as the force has worked to rapidly overhaul its fleets and turn a corner on persistent personnel shortages.

Commander says RCAF is on a 'path of growth' in 2026

Fulmer says B.C. Conservatives must be a grand coalition as he enters leadership race

Fulmer says B.C. Conservatives must be a grand coalition as he enters leadership race
Yuri Fulmer said the Conservative Party of B.C. needs to be a "grand coalition" that refrains from "undisciplined" behaviour if it wants to govern, as he becomes the first high-profile candidate to run for the party's leadership. 

Fulmer says B.C. Conservatives must be a grand coalition as he enters leadership race

Canada co-signs pact to help secure Ukraine after an eventual peace deal

Canada co-signs pact to help secure Ukraine after an eventual peace deal
Canada and Ukraine's other allies in the "coalition of the willing" signed a statement Tuesday pledging to help secure Ukraine from further Russian invasions if there is a viable peace deal.

Canada co-signs pact to help secure Ukraine after an eventual peace deal

Federal, provincial leaders visit First Nation in Manitoba hit by power outage

Federal, provincial leaders visit First Nation in Manitoba hit by power outage
Federal, provincial and Indigenous leaders are meeting with the chief of a beleaguered First Nation crippled by a frozen water system due to a days-long power outage.

Federal, provincial leaders visit First Nation in Manitoba hit by power outage

Carney heads to China next week for first visit by a prime minister in eight years

Carney heads to China next week for first visit by a prime minister in eight years
Prime Minister Mark Carney will travel to China next week — the first visit to the country by a Canadian prime minister in more than eight years — as the two countries move to restore stronger ties after years of trade and political tensions.

Carney heads to China next week for first visit by a prime minister in eight years

Doctors fear CDC vaccine recommendation changes will fuel vaccine hesitancy in Canada

Doctors fear CDC vaccine recommendation changes will fuel vaccine hesitancy in Canada
Doctors say the sweeping changes to the childhood vaccine schedule in the U.S. will fuel hesitancy that will cross the border into Canada.

Doctors fear CDC vaccine recommendation changes will fuel vaccine hesitancy in Canada