Quebec immigration minister commits to selecting 29,000 permanent residents under skilled workers' program | Page 873 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: January 30, 2026 - 10:14

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Quebec immigration minister commits to selecting 29,000 permanent residents under skilled workers' program

January 30, 2026

Despite repeat calls from mayors, businesses, and advocacy groups, Immigration Minister Jean-François Roberge is standing by his decision to eliminate the PEQ, a popular pathway to permanent residency, with no exemptions in place for those already in the province.



Unpublished Newswire

 
In a few days, when the Canadian men’s hockey Olympic team laces up their skates for their first game at the Milan–Cortina Games, there’ll be someone missing: Quebec players. The province has traditionally supplied an average of four Quebec-born players per squad since the National Hockey League began allowing teams to send players to Olympic rosters. In 2010, at the Vancouver Olympics, when Canada won gold, all three goalies were Quebecers: Martin Brodeur, Marc-André Fleury, and Roberto Luongo. In a historic first, since 1952, Canada’s twenty-five-man hockey delegation won’t have anyone...
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I open the faucet and water gushes out, frothing as it fills a bright blue twenty-litre plastic jug, its faded sticker declaring BUILT TOUGH. You’ve probably seen one in the outdoors aisle at Canadian Tire: a cubic jug with a red or white screw-top faucet and a built-in handle for convenience. Most Canadians would associate the blue jug with camping trips. I’m lugging six twenty-litre blue jugs in the back of my truck to my permanent residence outside of Whitehorse, a dwelling without running water known as a “dry cabin.” These 120 litres will last myself and my partner—and our three...
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