Indians to benefit from 30 new parliamentary seats in Canada
April 3rd, 2010 - 2:36 pm ICT by IANSBy Gurmukh Singh
Toronto, April 3 (IANS) The fast increasing population of Indian and other immigrant communities has forced the Canadian government to raise the number of MPs from 308 to 338.
The Conservative Party government has introduced a bill in parliament to raise the number of its seats by 30. If the bill is passed, the new seats will come into effect from 2014.
Most of the new constituencies will be created in the areas dominated by south Asians and Chinese in the provinces of Ontario, British Columbia and Alberta.
While Ontario, which has a huge presence of Indians in Toronto and its suburbs, will get 18 more seats, British Columbia with Punjabi-dominant Surrey, Abbotsford and other cities will get seven and Alberta five.
Most of Indians in Canada are settled in these three provinces.
Since many of the new constituencies will be created out of the seats currently held by Indo-Canadian MPs, Canada is set to see many more Indian faces in its future parliaments.
Currently, there are nine MPs of Indian-origin in the country’s parliament or the House of Commons - including Ujjal Dosanjh, Deepak Obhrai and Ruby Dhalla.
According to the latest figures released by Statistics Canada, Indians, Chinese and Muslims will become dominant communities in the next two decades. They will replace the whites as majority communities in major cities such as Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal. Chinese and Indians are the two top immigrant groups to come to Canada each year.
There are about 1.3 million Chinese, one million Indians and one million Muslims in the country’s population of 34 million. While Indians and Chines will more than double in numbers, the Muslims will triple in the next two decades.
Interestingly, French-speaking Quebec province, which has witnessed two separatist referendums since the 1970s, will get no additional parliamentary seats.
(Gurmukh Singh can be contacted at gurmukh.s@ians.in)
- Two Sikhs become ministers in Canada - May 19, 2011
- Deepak Obhrai may be named to Canadian cabinet - May 12, 2011
- Top Indo-Canadian MPs lost in Canadian elections - May 04, 2011
- Dosanjh, Dhalla lose as Canada's ruling party gets majority - May 03, 2011
- Sikh MP's motion on 1984 riots divides Indo-Canadians - Jun 10, 2010
- Canadian parliament may see more Indian-origin MPs - Apr 26, 2011
- Canadian PM lights Diwali lamp, eyes more trade with India - Nov 17, 2010
- First multimedia Sikh museum opens in Canada - Oct 11, 2010
- Deepak Obhrai re-appointed Canada's parliamentary secretary - May 26, 2011
- Mammohan Singh invites Indo-Canadian lawmakers for meeting - Jun 25, 2010
- It's Punjabi versus Punjabi in Canadian polls - Apr 28, 2011
- PM asks Sikhs to put 1984 behind, pays respects to Kanishka victims (Lead) - Jun 29, 2010
- Canadian parliament admits motion to call 1984 riots 'genocide' - Jun 12, 2010
- Canadian Sikhs angry as Quebec assembly bans kirpan - Feb 10, 2011
- Six Canadian MPs for Vibrant Gujarat summit - Dec 25, 2010
Tags: abbotsford, british columbia, canadian mps, chines, conservative party, gurmukh, house of commons, immigrant communities, immigrant groups, indian origin, indians in canada, indo canadian, parliamentary seats, party government, quebec province, referendums, ruby dhalla, south asians, statistics canada, ujjal dosanjh