Thank you.
I'd like to welcome all the witnesses. In particular, I'd like to thank you for taking time out of your busy lives to share your expertise with us here today.
Of course, we're here to study the backlog. Minister Kenney--and I think I'll be fair to what he said--has said on numerous public occasions that when the Liberal government came into power in 1993, they inherited an immigration system in which decisions were rendered in a few months' time and the backlog in applications was manageable.
Mr. Kenney says that when the Liberals left office in 2006, they left--thanks to their mismanagement, he said--a backlog of some 640,000 applications for the federal skilled worker program, and some 850,000 applications generally. I think that corrects it. But now, since he's been in office for five years, the backlog total has grown to over a million. I don't think Mr. Kenney would agree with me that it's his mismanagement, but the backlog has certainly grown.
What Mr. Kenney and I think the government are proposing is that we impose caps on applications as a means of dealing with the backlog. They point to the experience in the skilled worker class as an example of success.
Ms. Parker and Mr. Mokhtari, do you consider the ministerial instructions, what the government has done in the skilled worker category, to have been a success?