Why is citizenship automatically granted to those born in Canada?
CONSERVATIVES TARGET ‘BIRTH TOURISM’
At their weekend convention in Halifax, the Conservative Party of Canada approved a resolution to “enact legislation which will fully eliminate birthright citizenship in Canada unless one of the parents of the child born in Canada is a Canadian citizen or permanent resident of Canada.” In a subsequent statement, Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer said the measure was designed to “end birth tourism.”
This, more than almost any other Tory proposal, spurred immediate condemnation from opponents. NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, for one, called it a policy of “division & hate.”
Below, a quick guide to Canada’s somewhat unique policy of granting automatic citizenship to every baby born within its borders.
Most of the world does not grant automatic birth citizenship
If a French woman goes into labour while changing planes at Pearson International Airport in Toronto, the child automatically receives lifetime Canadian citizenship. Canada extends unconditional citizenship to anyone born within its borders under a legal principle known in Latin as “jus soli” (law of the soil). Conversely, if a Canadian woman goes into labour while changing planes at Paris-Charles de Gaulle airport, the child gets nothing except perhaps a decorative French birth certificate. This is generally the law across all of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania: A child’s nationality is determined based on the citizenship or residency of its parents rather than the flag flying over the maternity ward at the time. There are exceptions. Germany introduced qualifications into its citizenship law after whole Berlin neighbourhoods started to fill with German-born Turks unable to obtain citizenship.
… but most of the “New World” does grant it
Unless they’re the children of diplomats, babies born in Brazil are automatically Brazilians. Mexico confers citizenship on anybody “born in the territory of the Republic, regardless of the nationality of their parents.” Argentina not only extends automatic citizenship to Argentinian babies, but to the babies of Falkland Islanders. All across North and South America, jus soli is the recognized law of the land.
A whole bunch of people are not aware they are Canadians
Despite being born in a Calgary hospital, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz expressed confusion when he ran for U.S. president in 2016 that Canada recognized him as one of its own. “Because I have never taken affirmative steps to claim Canadian citizenship, I assumed that was the end of the matter,” he said. Australian Sen. Larissa Waters had to resign last year after she discovered that her Winnipeg birthplace made her a dual citizen, something forbidden for Australian legislators. “It is with great shock and sadness that I have discovered that I hold dual citizenship of Australia and Canada,” Waters said at the time. Fortunately, the Canadian government now maintains an online quiz, Am I Canadian?, in which foreign residents can discover whether maybe they too have been a secret Canadian this whole time.
Jus soli used to be the law across the British Empire
When John A. Macdonald’s family moved from Scotland to Upper Canada in 1820, they didn’t need any special immigration papers. The rule was that anybody born on a British ship or on British-controlled soil was a “subject” of Queen Victoria. The policy remained in place well into the 20th century, when the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act ascribed de facto citizenship to “any person born within His Majesty’s Dominions.”
In 1981, the U.K. did away with jus soli, decreeing that even children born in the British Isles couldn’t be British without at least one parent who was a U.K. permanent resident.
The Tories have proposed axing birthright citizenship before
In 2012, then-minister of Citizenship and Immigration Jason Kenney proposed phasing out Canada’s policy of jus soli, calling it an outdated relic from the age of steam. “With today’s inexpensive and rapid modern travel, someone can fly in for a couple of weeks, have a child and fly out, and otherwise never actually live in the country and have no intention of doing so,” he said at the time. Kenney was reacting to the growing issue of “birth tourism”: A cottage industry of foreign women having their children in Canada in order to provide them with Canadian citizenship. A leaked report from Kenney’s ministry estimated that there were fewer than 500 “birth tourists” — a fraction of Canada’s total 360,000 births.
… And so have the Liberals
In 1998, the citizenship and immigration minister at the time, Lucienne Robillard, suggested it was time for Canada to debate an end to jus soli. The issue then wasn’t birth tourism, but a court decision in which immigration officials had been unable to deport a Toronto woman because it was viewed as violating the rights of her two Canadian-born children. Robillard ultimately dropped the proposal, in part because of concerns that it would inaugurate a new demographic of “stateless” Canadians.