| Société du Dominion du Canada | |
| Formation | 1 July 2025 |
|---|---|
| Founders | Daniel Tyrie, Greg Wycliffe and Ken Jones. |
| Type | Non-profit corporation |
| Purpose | Canadian nationalism Anti-immigration activism |
| Location | |
| Field | Political movement Pressure group |
| Membership | |
Chairman | Daniel Tyrie |
| Subsidiaries | None |
| Website | www |
TheDominion Society of Canada (French:Société du Dominion du Canada) is ananti-immigrationCanadian nationalist group that was founded in 2025.
The Dominion Society seeks to promote "Heritage Canadians" as an ethnocultural group and advocates for a cessation of most forms of immigration to Canada andremigration of newcomers not of Anglo-Saxon or French European countries.[2][3][4][5][6][7] The Dominion Society has seen increased support due to the rise ofanti-immigrant sentiment in Canada.[8]
TheCanadian Anti-Hate Network describes the group as the "political arm" ofwhite nationalism in Canada, aiming at pushing theConservative Party of Canada to endorse the concept ofremigration.[9] The majority of the Dominion Society's registered members are young men.[10]
The Dominion Society of Canada was founded on 1 July 2025 by formerPeople's Party of Canada Executive DirectorDaniel Tyrie, Greg Wycliffe and Ken Jones,[11] and was established as a non-profit corporation on 10 July 2025.[12]
As of late October 2025, the group claimed some 2,000 members.[1][13] The Canadian Anti-Hate Network reported the Society shares membership and discussion spaces with groups such asDiagolon and is acting as the "political arm" of white supremacist groupSecond Sons.[9] However, in an emailed statement toThe Tyee, Dominion Society chairman Daniel Tyrie stated, "Characterizing the Dominion Society as the ‘political wing’ of other groups is a baseless and misleading claim that misrepresents our structure, mission and activities. We view this as an intentional attempt to undermine the credibility of a fast-growing organization whose message on national identity and remigration is resonating with a growing number of Canadians."[14]
Flyers promoting the group were noticed inNiagara-on-the-Lake weeks after it was established.[15][16]
On 17 October 2025, during aUniversity of Toronto Mississauga campus event by Member of parliamentJamil Jivani as part of his Restore the North tour, several audience members identified themselves as members of the Dominion Society. When the audience members put the idea ofRemigration to Jivani he said, "acknowledge it is complicated."[17] Later, on 3 November 2025, Jivani posted a video on Twitter with a speaker who was wearing a Dominion Society pin.[18]
On 17 November 2025, a group of between 10 and 15 people dressed in dark green hoodies gathered above the Ontario Highway 406 overpass inSt. Catharines. Some members wavedCanadian Red Ensigns and Dominion Society flags while others hung a banner which read, "REMIGRATION NOW."[19]
On 14 December 2025, a group of around 30 members of Dominion Society (including board members Greg Wycliffe and Ken Jones) gathered on a highway overpass inCalgary. Some members waved theCanadian Red Ensign and held a dominion society banner over the bridge that read "REMIGRATION NOW".[20] Board member Greg Wycliffe gave an interview to former Rebel news reporter Mocha Benzirgan during the event.[21]
On 29 January 2026, members of the Dominion Society (including chairmanDaniel Tyrie) held a demonstration inCalgary outside of the Conservative leadership convention.[22]
Tyrie has stated that the Dominion Society exists to push policies that "putCanadian people first". Its ten point program includes:[23]
The Dominion Society has also advocated for the Canadian government to classify Antifa as a terrorist organization,[24] in similar vein to how the United States, Hungary and the Netherlands classified Antifa groups in their countries as terrorist organizations.[25][26][27]
Balgord described the Dominion Society as the "political wing" of the movement, but Daniel Tyrie, the co-founder of the organization, disputes that description. "Characterizing the Dominion Society as the 'political wing' of other groups is a baseless and misleading claim that misrepresents our structure, mission and activities," Tyrie told The Tyee in an emailed statement. "We view this as an intentional attempt to undermine the credibility of a fast-growing organization whose message on national identity and remigration is resonating with a growing number of Canadians."