Meta has restricted access in India to two videos posted by the Congress on Instagram and Facebook after receiving takedown notices from the Delhi Police, according to a disclosure made by the US-based social media conglomerate to the Lumen Database, a Harvard University project
Younger Canadians and housing crisis drive sharpest anti-immigration shift in 50 years

The “sharpest reversal” in public opinion of immigration to Canada in 50 years was driven, in part, by younger people turning against an increased intake of newcomers, that they blamed to a housing affordability.
This was among the conclusions of a new paper published by the Institute for Research on Public Policy's Centre of Excellence on the Canadian Federation. Authored by Randy Besco, an associate professor at the University of Toronto, and Natasha Goel, a scholar there, the brief on immigration was based on over 40 years of surveys conducted by the Environics Institute.
The authors noted that “in 2023-24, polls showed the sharpest reversal in public opinion since at least the late 1970s, with opposition to immigration rising quickly”.
“Retrenchment on immigration may come as a surprise to some, given Canada's reputation for being tolerant, multicultural and pro-immigration. While this has been generally true at the policy level, public opinion has not always aligned with this image,” they stated.
They pointed out that survey data showed that most Canadians wanted less immigration from at least the late 1970s to the mid-1990s. Public opinion became more positive toward immigration in the mid-1990s, improved further into the mid-2000s, then stabilized for more than a decade, before the current anti-immigration sentiment emerged.
“The most striking reversal is seen in the generational divide. Older Canadians had long been less positive about immigrants. However, in the latest surveys, younger respondents expressed higher levels of opposition,” the paper said.
“This change may reflect concern about the housing affordability crisis, which disproportionately affects younger Canadians,” it added, pointing to high rents and limited prospects for home ownership, combined with media coverage and statements by politicians, that may be leading younger respondents to link immigration to their economic anxieties.
Angst over immigration, particularly in the temporary categories, has led to Government curbing intake since late 2023. A surge in immigration under then Prime Minister Justin Trudeau led to the backlash. However, pressure on politicians to address that concern has led to a reversal of years of policy that supported increased immigration.
Addressing this sentiment, the Government slashed projected intake of temporary residents by nearly 43 per cent in its levels plan tabled in Parliament in November.
“We are taking back control over the immigration system and putting Canada on a trajectory to bring immigration back to sustainable levels—allowing us to fulfill the promise of Canada to those who call it home,” Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada stated at the time.
Source: Hindustan Times
Related Posts: Canada Records Sharpest Population Decline In 80 Years Dollar makes a soft start to 2026 after sharpest drop in 8 years After Trump reversal Emari Demercado's epic goal line fumble leads to TD reversal Japan's role-reversal cafe lets customers dress as maids and serve staff for $25 Xi gains leverage before Trump summit after tariff reversal Ramya Hails Supreme Court's Reversal Of Actor Darshan's Bail Sean 'Diddy' Combs back in court to ask for reversal of conviction or new trial Serena Williams slams brakes on retirement-reversal chatter with clear message Opinion | Who Controls Pakistan’s Nuclear Arsenal
Meta has restricted access in India to two videos posted by the Congress on Instagram and Facebook after receiving takedown notices from the Delhi Police, according to a disclosure made by the US-based social media conglomerate to the Lumen Database, a Harvard University project
2 months ago