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Despite polls showing many Canadians were worried about the effects of immigration on housing and affordability late last year, the topic has scarcely been mentioned in the federal election campaign now drawing to a close.
The Trump administration was handed a rapid-fire series of court losses Wednesday night and Thursday in lawsuits filed over its policies on immigration, elections and its crackdown on diversity, equity and inclusion programs in schools.
Instead, immigration has emerged as one of Trump’s strongest issues in public polling, reflecting both his grip on the Republican base and a broader shift in public sentiment that is driven in part, interviews suggest, by anger at the policies of his predecessor, Democrat Joe Biden.
Goldman, a 50-year-old immigration lawyer who lives in Oro Valley, is entering a nationally watched Arizona congressional race arguing that he's well-positioned to stand up to President Donald Trump, whose administration has questioned the value of giving every migrant a trial and is accused of defying an order from the U.S. Supreme Court.
With Canada heading to the polls on April 28, immigration policy has taken center stage in the federal election debate, shaping the final arguments made by the country’s leading political parties. Both Liberal Party leader Mark Carney and Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre have placed immigration reform high on their campaign agendas,
Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan was elected in 2016. She spent much of her earlier career working on behalf of low-income people and marginalized groups.
Simpson hopes to unseat Conservative incumbent Michael Barrett in Monday’s federal election. Also in the running are Liberal candidate Lorna Jean Edmonds , Paul Lancione of the New Democratic Party, and Green Party candidate Randi Ramdeen. In a historically Conservative riding, Simpson has positioned herself as the candidate furthest to the right.