Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I have to go quickly, unfortunately.
I draw a distinction between temporary foreign workers and immigration. As the expression indicates, a temporary worker comes here to meet a temporary need, whereas, in an immigration case, we apply stronger criteria than those for employment, such as culture, language and belonging to this country.
Ms. Kunin said earlier that temporary workers should be able to stay in the country as long as there is work for them. Ultimately, that constitutes back-door immigration. We'll keep them as long as we have work to offer them. That's not necessarily the kind of citizen we want to take in. We don't just want workers; we want good Canadian citizens.
I would like to hear what you have to say on that.