Calgary Herald

Liberals swivel on ‘birth tourism’

Statistics reveal it might be an issue after all

- CHRIS SELLEY Comment

Well, here’s something curious. Last week the Liberal government announced it has commission­ed research on “birth tourism” — that is, the practice of coming to Canada with the sole intent of giving birth, then returning home with a child who’s a Canadian citizen. “The government of Canada recognizes the need to better understand the extent of this practice as well as its impacts,” Citizenshi­p Minister Ahmed Hussen wrote in a response tabled in Parliament.

It’s in reaction to new research by Andrew Griffith, a former senior official at Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Canada, published last week in Policy Options. It suggests the practice may be far more widespread than had previously been thought.

Earlier reported numbers from Statistics Canada, based on provincial records, suggested there might be 300 such births in a year. But a single hospital in Richmond, B.C., was reporting more.

Griffith turned instead to the Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n’s discharge abstract database, and found that 1.2 per cent of births between 2010 and 2017 in Canada, excluding Quebec, were to non-resident mothers.

That excludes refugee claimants and permanent residents who aren’t yet eligible for their province’s medical insurance; they are categorize­d separately. It includes people who aren’t birth tourists as we commonly think of them: Foreigners posted to Canada by their employers, internatio­nal students, and Canadian expats returning home to give birth.

Even if just half of those are “birth tourists,” though — a conservati­ve estimate, in Griffith’s view — it’s still more than five times what had been reported. We might be granting citizenshi­p to more birth tourist babies than Prince Edward Islander babies. The numbers grew steadily from 1,354 in 2010 to 3,628 in 2017.

None of that is to say this is a massive problem. I say it’s curious because earlier this year, when Conservati­ve Party of Canada members approved a resolution in fa- vour of the most superficia­lly obvious solution — don’t grant automatic citizenshi­p to Canadian-born children of parents who aren’t citizens or permanent residents — the Liberals, along with much of the Canadian media, went absolutely bananas.

“The NDP unequivoca­lly condemns the division and hate being peddled by Andrew Scheer and the CPC,” leader Jagmeet Singh tweeted. Gerald Butts, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s principal secretary, lamented that the Conservati­ves “committed to give the government the power to strip people born in Canada of Canadian citizenshi­p.”

Media consumers were told the policy would create stateless children. But Canada is bound by treaty not to create stateless people, as are the majority of countries around the world that do not grant absolute birthright citizenshi­p. Even the Conservati­ves’ law stripping convicted terrorists of Canadian citizenshi­p respected obligation­s regarding statelessn­ess; there’s every reason to believe these changes would as well.

“(It’s a) shame to see the Conservati­ves going back down the path establishe­d by the Harper government, which seeks to strip away the citizenshi­p of people who have only ever known Canada as a home,” a spokespers­on for Citizenshi­p Minister Ahmed Hussen fulminated.

You would never know it was Richmond MP Joe Peschisoli­do, a Liberal, who sponsored a petition asking the government to condemn birth tourism and figure out how to stop it. And you would certainly never know lawyers for Hussen’s department were in court arguing not to grant citizenshi­p to two Canadian-born children of Russian spies.

“Only 34 countries grant the automatic acquisitio­n of citizenshi­p through birthplace regardless of parents’ nationalit­y or status,” the federal submission argued (noting none of the 34 are in Europe). “This practice is not consistent and uniform enough to ground a rule of customary internatio­nal law.”

This is a trick only Liberals can pull off: Deny a problem exists; denounce those who suggest it exists as despicable human beings trying to foment social unrest; later accept there may actually be a problem without the slightest bit of humility, and if possible continue denouncing those who think there’s a problem even while trying to solve it. It speaks ill of our political arena that they get away with it so often.

None of the potential solutions are especially palatable. Griffith suggests asking visa applicants whether they intend to give birth in Canada; misreprese­ntation could lead to revocation of the child’s citizenshi­p, as it would have been acquired fraudulent­ly. He suspects enforcemen­t would be “virtually impossible,” however. And asking visiting women about their reproducti­ve intentions is the sort of thing Liberals would scream bloody murder about in opposition.

The Conservati­ves examined the idea of limiting birthright citizenshi­p but ultimately rejected it for reasons of cost and practicali­ty. But after studying the problem more in depth, if the problem really is five times or more bigger than we thought, there is no reason not to consider it again. This is something nearly every country comparable to Canada does without violating human rights. It makes perfect sense: We don’t grant citizenshi­p to children of foreign diplomats; why grant it to others whose parents have no personal link to Canada? There is something more than a bit weird about a country where such a normal idea can be met with such hysteria.

THERE IS SOMETHING A BIT WEIRD ABOUT A COUNTRY WHERE SUCH A NORMAL IDEA CAN BE MET WITH SUCH HYSTERIA.

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