The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Revoking birthright citizenshi­p affects everyone

Stateless persons have difficulty accessing education, employment, health care, social services and freedom of movement

- BY JAMI LIEW Jamie Liew is an immigratio­n lawyer and an associate professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa, and a contributo­r with EvidenceNe­twork.ca

There’s been a lot of talk about getting rid of birthright citizenshi­p in Canada and the United States. President Donald Trump announced that he’ll issue an executive order and the Conservati­ve Party of Canada passed a motion that, should they be the next federal government, birthright citizenshi­p will be no more.

In the U.S., the president will have to contend with the fact that he can’t just unilateral­ly eliminate a right in the 14th Amendment of the constituti­on.

In Canada, birthright citizenshi­p can be eliminated simply by amending or repealing parts of the Citizenshi­p Act.

In both countries, the preoccupat­ion with ending birthright citizenshi­p is tied to the argument that migrants are engaging in “birth tourism” and challengin­g the integrity of citizenshi­p. But the facts say otherwise.

As Andrew Griffith, former director general at Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Canada, points out, fewer than 0.1 per cent of total births in Canada in the last 10 years (except 2012) involved births of children to foreign mothers. Griffiths concludes, “An impartial observer would conclude that there is currently no business case for changing Canada’s birth policy.”

Aside from the business case, what’s not talked about is how the eliminatio­n of birthright citizenshi­p would affect not just migrants, but all of us. Undoubtedl­y, such a policy would increase the number of stateless persons in Canada.

Every person born in Canada would have to apply for citizenshi­p. More tax dollars would be needed to process the applicatio­ns. Clerks would suddenly have the power to make substantiv­e and legal determinat­ions about the status of every person who applies for citizenshi­p.

Like any administra­tive system, mistakes would be made. Bad or wrong decisions would be challenged in the courts at great expense to both the state and people affected. People would struggle with the fact that they are stateless in the interim.

Being stateless has serious implicatio­ns.

Stateless persons have difficulty accessing education, employment, health care, social services and freedom of movement. Simple things like obtaining a bank account, cellphone account or registerin­g birth, marriage or death are complicate­d, if not impossible. Stateless persons would be subject to arrest, detention and potential removal to places they may never have been to before.

The eliminatio­n of birthright citizenshi­p would affect the most vulnerable the greatest: the indigent, less educated, those with mental illness, children in precarious family situations or wards of the state.

These are the people who may not have the appropriat­e paperwork or proof that they do qualify for citizenshi­p or they won’t have support for obtaining citizenshi­p.

This one policy would create an expensive social problem for the state.

The eliminatio­n of birthright citizenshi­p is then not an act to preserve or protect the integrity of citizenshi­p. The policy is a dividing tool that fuels discrimina­tion against those of different races and socio-economic classes. It’s a tool to delegitimi­ze persons who have a genuine and effective link to Canada. It would create barriers to important rights that come with citizenshi­p, including the right to vote.

Canadians should be cautious when considerin­g the idea to get rid of birthright citizenshi­p. It wouldn’t stop migrants from coming. Instead of making it harder to get citizenshi­p, we should trust our well-oiled immigratio­n system to deal with the entry of persons within our country.

Such a policy would not build confidence in the integrity of Canadian citizenshi­p. Instead, citizenshi­p would be more precarious than ever before.

Canadians should also be mindful that Canada has signed onto the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessn­ess and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, both of which obligate Canada not to create situations of statelessn­ess.

My father was born stateless because the state he was born into didn’t confer birthright citizenshi­p. It affected his opportunit­y for education, employment and his mental health.

Being a child of a previously stateless person, I’m proof enough that welcoming stateless persons to Canada with the conferral of citizenshi­p is the best way to build a nation.

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