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Opinion | What Poilievre gets completely wrong about the temporary foreign workers’ program

Updated
3 min read
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Pierre Poilievre’s slogans of “Canadian jobs for Canadian workers” are designed to scare and anger Canadians,” writes Yvonne Su. “But when you strip away the theatrics and ask for evidence that is longer than a few words, the numbers and patterns tell a different story and Canadians are sick of being fed rage-bait in place of concrete policy.”


Yvonne Su is an associate professor in the department of equity studies at York University and a visiting scientist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s latest call to scrap the Temporary Foreign Worker (TFW) program has everything to go viral: a simple villain (migrant workers), an innocent victim (Canadian youth) and a big hammer (abolish the program). It’s politics reverse-engineered for engagement. The outrage is the point. The policy is the prop. As the journalism world calls it, the topic is a “talker” that feeds water-cooler chat at work.

In this new economy of attention, whatever elicits the most emotions travels the furthest. Social platforms reward emotional certainty over empirical complexity, so leaders often compress messy structural problems like slow productivity growth, weak training pipelines, stagnant wage ladders, into one explosive narrative: “foreign workers are taking your kids’ jobs.”

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Yvonne Su is an associate professor in the department of equity studies at York University and a visiting scientist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Opinion articles are based on the author’s interpretations and judgments of facts, data and events. More details

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