The Issues With Bill C-3 (same as with Bill C-71, proposed more than a year ago) . . .
Some belated but nonetheless just preliminary observations about what is at stake, what is happening, what will happen, the issues . . .
What the Law Should Be Issues:
Pros and Cons; should these provisions be or not be adopted?
-- without further amendment?
-- with further amendment?
-- -- if with further amendment, how so? (so far only the CPC has opposed the cumulative 1095 days presence test, proposing a far more strict hurdle, a draconian consecutive 1095 days presence test)
Should an entirely different test be adopted to define what constitutes "substantial connection" sufficient to confer citizenship on persons born outside Canada? Apart from the draconian CPC 1095 consecutive days present test, for a list with description of other prospective approaches see the Bjorkquist decision, which includes descriptions of approaches in the U.S., the UK, and in Australia, noting however the court favorably refers to a 1095 days within five years test and describes it as "
a simple, clear rule, and familiar because it is similar to the requirement for immigrants seeking Canadian citizenship."
As I previously commented, I will not pay much attention to these
what-should-be-the-law issues . . . other than to acknowledge them. And to note why the consecutive 1095 days presence test is far too draconian to consider, noting for example that just periodic long weekend trips to the states could preclude meeting this test even if the parent was well settled and living in Canada for many, many years. That test will not fly. Whether the proposed test or some other test should be adopted, again I will defer such questions to others.
Issues In Regards To Whether Bill C-3 Will Be Adopted, and What Will Influence This:
So far, except for the CPC, there appears to be solid support for this legislation. In particular, in addition to the governing Liberal Party tabling this legislation, all others, other than the CPC, have previously expressed support for the passage of these provisions (again, exactly these provisions), most of it very solid support (as in "
get-it-done" already). Given this, the more likely issue is what if any amendments to the Bill will be made, and very importantly,
WHEN will the Citizenship Act be amended to remedy the unconstitutionality of the FGL? The latter, when, will likely depend on the extent to which the CPC continues to employ the tactics it used to delay adoption of former Bill S-245 and stall progress on former Bill C-71.
I am reluctant to speculate about whether the CPC might force a
game of chicken, forcing delays that risk passing the November deadline, in effect using the deadline in an attempt to force the Liberals to compromise and adopt a more strict test for what will be a sufficient connection to Canada warranting the grant of citizenship to a second-generation born abroad person. The CPC did engage in such delaying tactics last year, and the court extended its previous deadlines. Not sure how accommodating the court will continue to be if passing the Bill continues to be stalled.
Note: while it is hard to forecast whether the court will grant further extensions if passage is delayed, it is very likely that the court will grant a further extension pending a later actual implementation date . . . given the logistics of actually implementing such changes, the Governor- general will need to allow IRCC a significant period of time to do this following adoption of the changes, so even if this Bill is expedited without CPC opposition, it is unlikely it could be adopted and then implemented before the current November deadline. That is, as long as a Bill is passed, or at least clearly on track to get timely adopted, the court is likely to extend the suspension of its order invalidating the FGL, even if actual implementation will not happen before next year.
Whether some other approach is likely to be adopted . . . spoiler alert, so far it does not appear there is much if any inclination at all to even consider, let alone any significant support for adopting the U.S. or UK or Australian approaches; not in the speeches in Parliament, not in committee meetings, for either the Senate Bill S-245 or Bill C-71. Especially not the U.S. approach.
Not sure why many here give much weight to what the U.S. does, but even before the Trumpian 51st State rhetoric rendered following what the U.S. does a virtual
do-not-touch third-rail in Canadian politics, as far as I have seen not even Conservatives have so much as suggested any aspect of the U.S. approach here. Of course I have not read transcripts of all 30 hours of filibustering the CPC apparently did to block S-245, but reports of it do not indicate much if any favorable citation of what the U.S. does, and again that was
before the 51st state stuff . . . and, moreover, there is a huge difference in U.S. citizenship compared to Canada, birthright citizenship being a constitutional right in the U.S., whereas there is no constitutional birthright citizenship in Canada, citizenship here being a privilege afforded by statute.
Validity -- will the cumulative 1095 day presence test pass constitutional/charter scrutiny?
This one is easy. Yeah, it will, easily. There is near universal agreement among the political parties and what IRCC calls "
stakeholders," and the Bjorkquist court, that even a more strict physical presence test would make the Citizenship Act Charter compliant (CPC appears to still maintain the FGL, the current law, is Charter-compliant, and for sure argues that a very strict consecutive 1095 days presence test would be Charter compliant, let alone the rather minimal hurdle that Bill C-3 proposes). Moreover, remember, it took well over a decade to get a court to even consider whether the current Act is Charter compliant in regards to the FGL. And here too, perhaps even more so, the fact that in Canada citizenship is a privilege, granted by statute, not a constitutional right, looms large, lowering the bar for what is Charter compliant considerably.
Nonetheless, questions about this warrant addressing. In due course.
Establishing/proving 1095 days of physical presence:
This might be the big issue, except . . .
I expect, in a subsequent post, to more fully address what many may consider the main issue, or at least the issue that appears to loom large among more than a few here, and that is what will establish (or prove) a parent's physical presence for 1095 days.
Caveat: I am not sure there is a real issue here (other than individual case specific, particular balance of probabilities questions that typically arise, and are routinely adjudicated, in cases where facts are contested) given the extensive experience IRCC has adjudicating applications and other processes that depend on assessing evidence of physical presence, including calculation of the number of days, and the Federal Court in reviewing such decisions. That experience includes adjudicating PR RO compliance based on physical presence for the past quarter century, as well as adjudicating PR applications for citizenship in many if not most citizenship cases for nearly a half century, but also as the definitive, dispositive determination of physical presence required for applications made since June 2015.
Moreover, the gist of it is not complicated, the crux of it already been observed, as
@scylla commented:
Onus is on the applicant to gather enough evidence to prove the residency days.
Except that, under the proposed rule, mere presence is sufficient even if the total consists entirely of days here during visits to Canada, counting even days here for very short visits; no need for any sustained period of
residency in Canada.
A lot more can be said about establishing presence, but it warrants remembering that CIC/IRCC and the Federal Courts have had extensive experience, for decades, applying a balance of probabilities burden of proof standard in regards to counting days PRs are physically present in Canada. There is little hint this will be a big issue generally.