Canada plans Express Entry reset

Today’s edition tracks a major reset in Canada’s immigration system that could reshape pathways for Indian professionals, the growing influence of Indiaspora as it connects a global network of Indians beyond remittances, and a cultural detour into Bollywood’s Dhurandhar moment, where cinema has sparked a wider debate on storytelling, propaganda and identity.

Let’s go.


THE BIG STORY

Canada plans Express Entry reset

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Canada is preparing one of its biggest immigration reforms in a decade, with plans to replace three major visa streams under Express Entry with a single, unified high-skilled pathway. The move signals a structural shift in how the country selects and filters global talent.

Why it matters:
For Indian applicants, who form a significant share of Canada’s skilled migration pipeline, this could redraw the rules of entry. A simplified system may reduce confusion, but it also means existing pathways that many candidates have tailored their profiles around could disappear. The shift reflects a broader trend where countries are moving away from rigid categories towards flexible, labour-market-driven selection.

Driving the news:
Canada’s immigration department is considering scrapping the Federal Skilled Worker Class, Canadian Experience Class and Federal Skilled Trades Class, and replacing them with a single federal high-skilled category with streamlined eligibility requirements. The proposal aims to cut overlap between programmes and make the system easier for both applicants and employers to navigate.

The big picture:
The reform is still at an early stage, with consultations scheduled for Spring 2026 and implementation likely to take time. But the direction is clear. Canada is moving towards a more centralised, skills-first immigration model that aligns directly with labour market needs. Experts see this as a fundamental reset of the country’s economic immigration strategy, one that could prioritise adaptability over predefined categories.

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NRI WATCH

Indiaspora’s global desi network grows bigger and broader

 

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Indiaspora, founded in 2012 by entrepreneur MR Rangaswami, is emerging as one of the few platforms trying to connect the Indian diaspora across regions, professions and generations. With members from 25 countries gathering in Bengaluru for its latest forum, the organisation is positioning itself not just as a networking hub but as a space to map the diaspora’s wider influence in business, culture, philanthropy and ideas.

The story is not just about remittances anymore. Indiaspora’s impact report says 76% of overseas angel investors backing Indian startups are from the diaspora, while more than 60% of surveyed Indian NGOs have received diaspora donations. The group is also expanding into year-round programming, from climate and global health to a youth-focused initiative called Indiaspora Next.

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OFFBEAT

Dhurandhar Derangement Syndrome

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Somewhere between “agitprop” and “propaganda,” a new affliction has entered Bollywood discourse: Dhurandhar Derangement Syndrome. It is what happens when a film stops being just a film and becomes a Rorschach test for your worldview.

Aditya Dhar’s Dhurandhar duology has triggered exactly that. Critics have called it everything from majoritarian to Islamophobic, while defenders see it as something Bollywood had long forgotten how to do — tell a coherent, civilisational story without hiding behind irony or imitation.

The real shift lies elsewhere. For decades, mainstream Hindi cinema leaned into a comforting myth — that conflict could be dissolved through sentiment, that enemies could be reasoned with over shared culture. Dhurandhar breaks from that grammar. It trades idealism for revenge fantasy, abstraction for specificity, and in doing so, lands closer to the audience’s lived reality.

The result is not just a film, but a feedback loop. Memes, arguments, outrage. The kind of cultural spillover that signals something has escaped the screen and entered the bloodstream. Whether one calls it propaganda or myth-making is almost beside the point. The reaction to it tells the bigger story.

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DID YOU KNOW?

DID YOU KNOW 1


NRI SPOTLIGHT

NRI SPOTLIGHT 1


LemonChilli.News

LEMON CHILLI

News that hits like a meme, but sticks like a fact. For more, visit LemonChilli.News.

 



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Disclaimer

Views expressed above are the author’s own.



END OF ARTICLE



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