I make a concerted effort to follow and research how certain aspects of the grant citizenship application process actually works, and an honest effort to explain what I learn. I am no expert, for sure. But I leave the blinders off and focus on, as best it can be discerned, how things actually work.
What many, if not nearly all of those who advocate there is no problem living abroad after applying, or otherwise appearing to not be settling permanently in Canada, fail to acknowledge, is that this is blatantly inconsistent with a key purpose for which the Canadian law provides a path to citizenship, and that can influence a decision-maker's assessment of the person's credibility.
This is not to say that living abroad after applying or an intent to live outside Canada after the oath, will in itself be grounds to deny citizenship. This is to acknowledge, however, that an agent's inquiry into this is not improper, but rather is well within the very broad scope of permitted questioning, and applicants and prospective applicants should be aware that IRCC processing agents and officers may indeed ask questions related to this, directly as well as indirectly.
Note, I am not the one who initially reported, in this thread, that an IRCC interview included questions about where the applicant planned to live.
I realize there is no shortage of forum participants ready and willing to dismiss reports that are inconsistent with how they believe the process should work. As if they know better than the agents and officers whose job it is to screen and evaluate those applying for citizenship.
The anecdotal report by
@Dr kbknaidu appears credible, and specific on this point. It is a specific, recent example of a citizenship applicant being asked about where they planned to live. A rather big clue that IRCC officials engaged in screening citizenship applicants might ask about where the applicant plans to live . . . since they do.
What I tried to do is illuminate or explain the relevance of this questioning. Leading to . . .
My wording is clumsy, I admit. I am no expert. I try, trying to explain such things as best I can.
But as I tried to illuminate, the purpose of the law is an important element in its interpretation, application, and enforcement. Individuals whose intentions are inconsistent with the law's purpose, let alone contrary to it, are simply persons for whom those mandated with applying and enforcing the law may have concerns about their credibility. Not complicated. Not mysterious. Not nefarious. Not old school. Rather basic decision-maker procedure actually.
There is a tendency here to conflate what the law allows (such as an applicant for citizenship having no intention of settling and living in Canada permanently) with what the law intends, with the law's purpose (such as, here, to enable a former Foreign National to settle and live in Canada PERMANENTLY).
There is no penalty for acting contrary to what the law intends, to its purpose, so long as the individual actually does stay within what the law allows.
But it is certainly well within the discretion of those responsible for applying and enforcing the law to make inquiries about these matters. And as I noted above, a big clue that IRCC might indeed make such inquiries is the fact that, as @Dr kbknaidu reports, an applicant for citizenship was recently asked just such questions.
Note, too, otherwise the scope of permissible questioning is extremely broad. Even without a direct basis in the governing law for questions related to plans or intentions, such questions are well within that scope.
I am not commenting, in anyway whatsoever, about what the law should be or how it "should" be applied. I focus on what we can discern about how things actually work.
Moreover, it is readily seen that many aspects of the process have been disrupted and are otherwise in flux due to the global pandemic. So it is very difficult to get a pulse as to certain aspects of the process right now. One of the things I am watching for is whether or not we see a difference in tracking the post-test timelines for those applicants who took the test virtually while abroad versus those who were in Canada. That should be a significant clue about whether those outside Canada are still encountering more non-routine processing and related delays. Something to watch for in order to learn more, learn better, how things actually work.