In 2025, Canada’s immigration system is facing one of its most serious credibility crises in years.
Legal experts and applicants fear that Ottawa may be preparing to cancel large numbers of pending immigration applications amid growing delays and public frustration.
Renowned immigration lawyer Steven Meurrens has warned that the federal government appears to be laying the groundwork for mass cancellations through Bill C-12 — a new border security proposal that would expand IRCC’s (Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada) powers.
“I think it is becoming increasingly likely,” Meurrens said, suggesting that the department’s silence may be deliberate.
“Part of why they may be being quiet about it is because the solution involves Bill C-12, and they know the panic and reaction that will cause.”
For tens of thousands of applicants who have waited years, the idea of another legislative reset feels chillingly familiar.
And for critics, it confirms what months of data already show: IRCC is losing control of its processing system while equipping itself with new authority to erase its own backlog.
Processing times across nearly every major immigration stream have worsened dramatically since May 2024, when IRCC briefly reported improvement.
By October 2025, that trend had reversed, with double-digit increases across several programs.
Applications for citizenship now average 13 months, up from 8, while family sponsorships have nearly doubled.
Even so-called “fast-track” programs like the Atlantic Immigration Program have expanded from six months to thirty-seven.
Meanwhile, temporary residents—workers, students, and visitors—face cascading delays:
Work permit renewals now take 7+ months (up from 3).
Visitor visas from India have tripled in wait time.
Ottawa attributes these spikes to “admission targets” and “capacity limits,” but critics argue this creates the very conditions under which mass cancellations become politically appealing.
Programs such as Humanitarian & Compassionate (H&C) and Federal Self-Employed are now listed as taking “more than ten years.”
For entrepreneurs and caregivers, this makes the system practically unusable.
The October 2025 processing times show a clear upward climb since May 2024:
| Category | May 2024 | October 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Citizenship Grant | 8 months | 13 months |
| Citizenship Certificate | 3 months | 8 months |
| Spouse/Common-Law (Inside Canada, Non-Quebec) | 11 months | 22 months |
| Parents & Grandparents (Quebec) | 33 months | 44 months |
| Atlantic Immigration Program | 6 months | 37 months |
| Start-Up Visa / Federal Self-Employed | 37 months | 120 months |
| Work Permit (Inside Canada) | 92 days | 223 days |
| Visitor Visa (India) | 25 days | 86 days |
| Super Visa (India) | 51 days | 167 days |
These are not statistical blips — they represent thousands of families and employers waiting far longer than before.
Unfortunately, yes — and it has done so before.
In 2012, under then-Immigration Minister Jason Kenney, the federal government cancelled roughly 280,000 Federal Skilled Worker (FSW) applications filed before 2008, citing modernization.
Applicants who had waited years suddenly received notices that their files were erased. Legal challenges followed, but the courts upheld the government’s right to legislate away pending cases.
Two years later, in 2014, Ottawa cancelled the Investor and Entrepreneur backlogs to make way for new pilot programs.
That precedent is exactly why Bill C-12 alarms experts today.
If passed, it would allow the Immigration Minister to suspend, defer, or cancel classes of applications under vague criteria such as “public interest” or “operational needs.”
The 2012 wipeout damaged Canada’s international reputation, especially among applicants from India, China, the Middle East, and Europe who had spent years building their cases.
Critics warned it undermined the rule of law and trust in Canada’s immigration process.
Fast-forward to 2025, and similar fears are spreading.
Online communities for international students and skilled workers are filled with speculation about possible cancellations if Bill C-12 becomes law.
The difference this time is scale — IRCC’s inventories are much larger, affecting millions of files across multiple categories, including applicants already inside Canada on temporary status.
Behind the administrative language lies a clear political motive.
Canada’s next Immigration Levels Plan (2026–2028) is expected to lower PR targets after years of record inflows.
The government presents this as a move to manage housing and affordability, but reduced targets without cutting intake means longer queues.
That creates political risk: too many newcomers, too few approvals, and growing public frustration.
A mass cancellation clause offers a quick fix — a way to “reset” numbers before the next election.
Critics see Bill C-12 as more than modernization; they call it a “political safety valve.”
Behind every data point is a person or family living in limbo.
Spouses face 22-month delays, living apart or on temporary status without full rights.
Parents and grandparents wait nearly four years for reunification.
Students lose study seats due to permit delays.
Employers lose skilled hires because work permits arrive too late.
Even pilot programs like the Home Care Worker and Agri-Food Pilot now have processing times of 9–19 years, rendering them ineffective.
For applicants already in Canada, the emotional and financial toll is severe — living year-to-year on temporary status creates instability and exclusion in a system that was once marketed as efficient and fair.
Bill C-12 introduces sweeping powers framed as administrative “efficiency.”
But without defined limits, it could allow ministers to cancel any application class—from humanitarian cases to skilled workers—without debate.
IRCC insists decisions won’t be unilateral, but the 2012 precedent says otherwise.
If passed, Bill C-12 could once again allow IRCC to erase pending files legally, sparking another wave of litigation and public backlash.
Immigration Minister Lena Metlege Diab maintains that IRCC’s actions are rooted in transparency and accountability.
“Publishing processing-time data was not a mistake,” said her spokesperson, Laura Blondeau.
“We’re looking to be as transparent as possible.”
However, applicants argue that transparency without reform is meaningless.
Posting longer wait times without reducing them only underscores the department’s failure to deliver results.
Experts suggest several reforms to restore stability and confidence:
Temporary Intake Pause – Halt new applications in overcapacity programs to prevent backlogs from growing.
Expand Processing Resources – Reallocate funds toward hiring, training, and AI-based document verification.
Guarantee Against Retroactive Cancellations – Enact legal safeguards to protect applicants from legislative wipeouts.
Simplify Overlapping Pilots – Merge similar programs to reduce administrative duplication.
Without decisive action, IRCC risks moving from one crisis to the next, reacting to pressure instead of reforming the system.
The deepening delays and Bill C-12’s new powers suggest 2026 could become a turning point for Canada’s immigration system.
With reduced intake targets and mounting backlogs, the government appears to be preparing for a period of controlled contraction—less intake, more central authority, and possibly, the legal flexibility to erase pending files.
Public trust in IRCC—already shaken—could deteriorate further.
If applicants believe their files can be deleted overnight, the integrity of the entire system is at stake.
Meanwhile, labour shortages and family separation will continue to strain Canada’s economy and social fabric.
To preserve both economic strength and moral credibility, 2026 must be a year of structural reform, not legislative shortcuts.
Canada’s promise has always been simple:
If you apply in good faith, your place in line should be protected.
Until that principle is restored, Canada’s immigration crisis will remain not only a backlog of applications—but a backlog of broken trust.