I've been following two bills in Canadian Parliament. Bill C-4 and Bill C-12. I searched on AI today to see the status of these important bills. The reason I am interested is 15 foreign nationals facing extortion‑related charges in Canada have applied for refugee status. This figure comes directly from the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), which confirmed that these individuals made refugee claims after coming under immigration investigation. These people have lived here for a while, they didn't just come in. It's about time this loop hole for people who are not fleeing a country that is dangerous, but coming to this country to extort our law abiding citizens for millions of dollars. Deport them ASAP!
Bill C‑4 is now law. It received Royal Assent on March 12, 2026. Here is what I found on Bill C-12:
Bill C‑12 – Strengthening Canada’s Immigration System and Borders Act
Current Stage (March 2026)
• Bill C‑12 has completed Third Reading in the Senate (March 12, 2026).
• The Senate has sent a message back to the House of Commons with amendments and recommendations.
• The bill is now “At consideration in the House of Commons of amendments made by the Senate.”
This means the House must now:
1. Accept the Senate’s amendments,
2. Reject them, or
3. Propose alternatives.
Only after that can the bill proceed to Royal Assent and become law.
Bill C‑12 will become law only after:
1. The House of Commons responds to the Senate’s amendments.
2. Both chambers agree on a final text.
3. The bill receives Royal Assent.
Given the political attention around this bill—including strong advocacy from migrant‑rights groups urging the Senate to amend or reject parts of it—debate may continue for some time. Let's hope that doesn't happen and receives Royal Assent soon!
The Senate made three proposals:
Privacy Protection Amendment
1. Proposed by: Senator Paulette Senior
Purpose: Protect Canadian citizens and permanent residents from unnecessary surveillance.
What it does
• Exempts Canadian citizens and permanent residents from the bill’s expanded information‑sharing powers.
• Ensures that only foreign nationals are subject to the new data‑sharing regime.
• Responds to concerns from privacy experts and civil‑liberties groups about the bill’s broad language.
2. Proposed by: Senator Tony Dean
Purpose: Add transparency to the new asylum‑ineligibility rules (especially the one‑year claim deadline).
What it requires
The immigration minister must publish an annual report detailing:
• Average time between a claimant entering Canada and making their claim
• Number of claims ruled ineligible because they were made more than one year after entry
• How many late claimants left and re‑entered Canada
• How many late claimants applied for a Pre‑Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA)
• How many PRRA applications were accepted or rejected
• Recommendations on whether the one‑year ineligibility rule should be changed
3. Proposed by: Senator Tony Dean
Purpose: Ensure long‑term accountability for the bill’s sweeping new powers.
What it does
• Requires a comprehensive parliamentary review of the entire Act five years after it becomes law.
• The review must assess:
• How the law has been implemented
• Its impact on asylum seekers, migrants, and immigration processing
• Any recommended changes
• A final report must be tabled in Parliament within one year of the review starting.




