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Immigration rates would have to fall by at least 80% for Canada to have a chance, no Western country has ever reduced immigration by even half that amount in recent (post-1980) history. Even Denmark has only held steady (numbers shot up last year, but mainly because they took 35,000 Ukrainian refugees), and Danish polices of forced assimilation, tracking the population of "MENAP" (essentially all Muslim countries) descent, paying people to go home and banning almost all asylum seekers from ever settling permanently are almost unimaginable for Canada.
To give you an idea, the anti-immigration movement in Denmark won in 2001 and non-Western immigration continued to rise through 2019. It took almost 20 years for them to fully grasp the levers of power. The all time asylum seeker record intake was in October 2015. And this is in a country where it is considered broadly politically acceptable to say "the majority of people in Denmark should be 'Danish-minded'" (the term is translated directly, indirectly it essentially means ethnic Danes). Imagine a mainstream CPC politician saying "the majority of Canadians should remain ethnically French or Anglo-Saxon". They might well be expelled from parliament. Even the hardcore Quebec nationalists on the far right of the PQ dance around this stuff.
The Canadian Tories have mulled maybe possibly potentially possibly reducing immigration by "a bit". In reality, the most they seem likely to accomplish is keeping numbers where they are (a feat given family reunification is an ever-expanding process by default, especially without US-style caps on greencard numbers by country of origin). That's 2.2 million immigrants a year (900,000 of which are students, but only 40% of international students seem to leave Canada upon graduation) in a country of 38 million people.
Has this ever been true? I mean, yes, it’s partly sophistry to say actually when you count the Irish and Slavs and Italians separately Canada hasn’t been majority English since 18whatever. But the fact that the sophistry exists to point out is a meaningful difference from Denmark or Hungary or whatever other European country people want to point to.
In 1940, 5.7 million Canadians were from the British Isles, and 3.5 million were French, out of a total population of about 11.5 million. 1.2 million of those of British Isles descent were Irish, but this may have included Anglo-Irish or Scots-Irish variably, so removing them all from that list is questionable. Say we (generously) remove 1 million from that figure to account for ethnic Irish, we're still left with 73% of the Canadian population in 1940 being unambiguously of English, Scottish, Welsh or French stock.
I stand corrected, but ‘Canada has always had lots of non-Anglo-French’ is still true in a way that ‘Denmark has always had lots of non-danes’ isn’t.
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