OTTAWA – MPs on the House of Commons national security committee have amended the government’s border security bill, C-12, to restrict benefits to people subject to removal orders can access.
Conservative immigration critic Michelle Rempel Garner added an amendment that prevents anyone subject to a removal order from accessing federal social services beyond emergency medical care.
Quebec Liberal MP Jacques Ramsay introduced another revision that would give those individuals access to maternal health services and community health care for STDs, but it was voted down.
Liberal committee members also refined the legislation’s wording on when the government can modify or cancel immigration documents in the “public interest.”
The expanded definition says these sweeping powers can be used in cases of fraud, threats to public health, safety or national security, or to correct an administrative error.
In prior committee hearings, Immigration Minister Lena Diab and department officials said the term “public interest” was kept intentionally vague to give the government flexibility.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 26, 2025.
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