Canada appoints Ted Gallivan as immigration deputy minister
SHOCK MOVE: Carney Taps Security Hardman to Fix Broken Immigration System in Major Shake-Up
Canada’s immigration department is getting a new sheriff.
Prime Minister Mark Carney has made a stunning appointment, naming Ted Gallivan as the new deputy minister of immigration, refugees, and citizenship in a move set to take effect within weeks.
The announcement, dropped on March 4, signals a dramatic shift in how Ottawa plans to handle the spiraling crisis gripping the nation’s borders.
Gallivan is no bureaucratic paper-pusher.
Currently serving as interim deputy national security and intelligence advisor to the Prime Minister, the veteran operative brings serious spy credentials to a department under fire.
Insiders say the appointment sends a clear message: the days of chaos are over.
The Enforcer Arrives
Sources close to the PMO describe Gallivan as a “fixer” with deep ties to Canada’s intelligence community.
His move from the shadowy world of national security to the high-profile immigration portfolio suggests Carney wants tougher vetting and faster processing—or heads will roll.
The department has been hemorrhaging credibility amid crushing backlogs and public fury over housing shortages linked to explosive population growth.
Now, Gallivan inherits the mess.
He steps into the role as Canada struggles to balance compassionate refugee policies with strained resources and voter fatigue hitting boiling point.
Ottawa watchers predict sweeping changes within months as the new deputy takes the helm.
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