Some mornings are more “liberal” than others, as I scour the news of the day and view my Canada from a conservative perspective, as best I can despite the many factors working against me.
Today I find that Liberal Immigration Minister Judy Sgro let a party campaign-worker hack—a much-needed pole-dancer—into her Liberal Canada. Canada is lacking all sorts of skilled labor, especially Liberal Party campaign workers and pornographers, apparently.
No word on the numbers of prostitutes and drug smugglers the Liberals are letting into their Canada this year—but then I assume they haven’t had time to thank all their campaign volunteers yet.
Liberal Canada (“their Canada”, as the Liberal campaign slogan went) is fun if you like the kids smoking pot; if you’re fine with killing 100,000 unborn babies every year; you love government social programs to support you so you don’t have to; you’re fine with gays and cross-dressers and transvestites getting married; and you dig a nice family-out evening of watching foreign porno Liberal Party campaign workers thrust their smelly sphincter at you in smoke-filled beer parlours.
Stripper at centre of asylum row
[Liberal] Immigration Minister Judy Sgro granted a temporary-resident permit to a Romanian exotic dancer and campaign volunteer as she was planning to crack down on failed refugee claimants hiding out in church sanctuaries, according to government insiders.Officials say Ms. Sgro’s actions upset Toronto immigration officials, but the minister denied in an interview that she knew Alina Balaican, even though she authorized the special ministerial permit, which means the female dancer cannot be deported from Canada.
Liberal insiders say the minister signed the permit June 25, just three days before the summer election, for a 25-year old Romanian who came to Canada on a temporary work permit to perform as an exotic dancer and later served as an election volunteer at Ms. Sgro’s campaign office in the Toronto riding of York West.
Ms. Sgro cited “humanitarian factors” in approving the temporary-resident permit, which allows Ms. Balaican to remain in Canada for another two years and apply for permanent resident status.
“I don’t know the name,” Ms. Sgro said. “What can I tell you? We deal every week with 50 or 60 applications in cases. I don’t recognize her name.”
She did not deny that Ms. Balaican helped out in the campaign, but said she does not remember meeting her.
“You know what? Hundreds of people work in campaigns,” she added.
Ms. Sgro’s communications director, Sherri Haigh, refused to answer further questions about how the minister came to approve the permit, citing privacy concerns.
[…]
Insiders also say her election team failed to alert Immigration authorities about an Indian deportee on the run from the department who delivered pizza and hung out at the minister’s election headquarters.
[…]
When it was pointed out that her campaign aides knew the individual and had been told about his case, she denied all knowledge of the affair, saying she was absent from the campaign during that period.
[…]
Sources say a high-level North Korean official, whose asylum plea had once been rejected after the Immigration and Refugee Board branded him a potential war criminal, also spent two days at Ms. Sgro’s Toronto headquarters, where he sought assistance in obtaining landed immigrant status.
[…]
I can tell you from my personal experience that candidates know each and every volunteer by name. Please note that I am not a foreign porno strip-club male dancer, or a liberal.
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