I do not mean or intend to argue the observations I have made, offered to illuminate and inform, to provide information that might help applicants and prospective applicants make decisions in navigating their own path toward citizenship, and to better understand what is happening along the way.
I acknowledge my manner of writing struggles some, fancy words or otherwise, so I will try to better explain.
I also recognize there is a contingency of forum participants who more or less insist that that living abroad after applying, or otherwise appearing to have been
applying-on-the-way-to-the-airport, poses no more risk of elevated scrutiny or credibility concerns than applicants generally have. And some are rather militant in challenging any suggestions otherwise.
Frankly, that appears to be mostly about how they believe things
should work and not so much based on evidence about how things actually work.
Prior to Covid the evidence leaned in the other direction. Going forward, post-Covid . . . as I previously observed, it will be interesting to see if there is any difference in post-test timelines for those who took the knowledge of Canada test virtually while in Canada compared to those who did the virtual test while outside Canada. I am not at all certain how this will go, but based on following the grant citizenship process in Canada for more than a decade now, my guess (which is not an expert's guess but is a fairly informed one) is that a greater percentage of those who took the test while abroad will be encountering further delays and non-routine processing. How much so, if so, is hard to forecast.
In terms of "logic," I make no effort to claim my logic is any better than yours, but neither your logic nor mine is much relevant. The reasoning employed by IRCC officials, and the Federal Court justices who review their decisions, that is the logic that matters. At least that is what matters for those who want to know how the system actually works, so they can not only better understand what is happening with their applications but also so they can make better decisions along the way.
Which brings this to those few things you "
point" out. You are arguing with me. But my view is worth little more than a shrug. Who cares what I think? My reasoning, my logic, is not worth much. What matters is how IRCC processing agents and officers approach things. And in that regard, I made an effort to illuminate and explain, as best I have been able to discern, and as best I can do, how IRCC processing agents and officers approach these things. You challenge (but also mischaracterize) my description of the purpose underlying the
system providing a path for FORMER Foreign Nationals to come to Canada, settle and live in Canada PERMANENTLY, and become citizens (the grant of citizenship merely the last, culminating event along that path). OK. You do not buy that is a relevant factor, one among others, underlying why
@Dr kbknaidu was asked about where he intends to live. But that appears to be based on your logic, whereas again it is the reasoning, the logic employed by IRCC officials, and the Federal Court justices who review their decisions, that matters.
So, in regards to those few things you "
point" out, you misquote and misconstrue what I have attempted to illuminate. Since the focus of my observations was about the propriety of the processing agent inquiring about whether
@Dr kbknaidu was "
going to stay in this country," I will address that part in particular. You stated:
"You are asserting that the very fact that this OP was questioned about his/her intention to live in Canada is proof/evidence that this line of questioning is "well within the discretion of" IRCC agents."
That is NOT what I asserted. I stated "
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."
That was in addition (set off by a new sentence beginning with "
And" to emphasize it was in addition) to my other observation that asking such questions is well within the discretion of IRCC officials.
BOTH are relevant and for some applicants potentially important. Both being:
(1) It is well within the discretion of IRCC officials to ask questions related to where the applicant is currently living, working, and will be living, and
(2) The likelihood of questioning along these lines is evidenced by the fact that there is a recent credible report of an applicant being asked such questions.
My sense is that was clear enough in my previous post. But yeah, I realize I struggle with words, so hopefully this better illuminates what I was saying.
As for the challenge that it is (or should not be) within the discretion of IRCC officials to ask questions related to where the applicant is currently living and will be living, you appear to base that largely on the fact that there is no intent to reside in Canada requirement. There is no requirement to be employed either, but IRCC officials clearly have discretion to ask, and often do ask about a citizenship applicant's employment, and not only employment history but current employment (as I was asked during my interview). No hint whatsoever in a hundred plus Federal Court decisions (and yes I have read at least that many regarding grant citizenship) that questions about the applicant's employment are improper.
Or, to quote me back in
2017, in this forum, in a discussion (here
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/intention-to-live-in-canada-during-application-process.502841/#post-6141766 ) about the repeal of the SCCA provision, repealed section 5(1)(c.1) in the Citizenship Act, often referred to as the "
intent to reside" provision (so yeah, I was, as you reference, "aware" of that):
Not all questions need relate directly to a qualifying requirement. Many questions can be, and sometimes are asked, aimed at evaluating the applicant's credibility.
Moreover, to further quote me back in 2017, in regards to the repeal of the intent to reside provision, I then noted:
I offered the purpose underlying the path to citizenship to explain why the questions posed to
@Dr kbknaidu might have been asked, how that related to credibility. But even if I am wrong about the purpose (I am not, but set that aside), not only do IRCC officials have the discretion to ask a wide, wide range of questions, they have a wide, wide range of discretion in deciding which applicants will be subject to elevated scrutiny, non-routine processing, including RQ-related processing.
There is virtually NO review of the scope of questions they can ask or the reasons why they subject an applicant to non-routine processing or RQ-related procedures.
Moreover, much of how they approach these things falls under the ambit of investigatory methods and means, and is confidential, meaning secret.
There is no hint in any Federal Court decision that the scope of questions asked citizenship applicants is limited.
BOTTOM-LINE: There is nothing "illegal" about the interviewer asking questions relating to the applicant's current living or working situation or future plans, and there is nothing in any decision by a Federal Court to so much as suggest that such inquires constitutes a "
questionable practice."
THUS:
-- they can ask, and
-- as the report by
@Dr kbknaidu illustrates, they sometimes do ask