So there is absolutely no chance that she will be allowed to stay on a visitor visa 4 times (6 months each) if she leaves on time at the end of every 6 month?
We are thinking that if she can manage to come inside for 6 months, through my connections I can help her getting an employment.
Further I have below questions:
1. Can she work remote for her French employer from Canadian soil while she is visiting?
2. If she gets a job inside canada (someone is ready to give her a work permit), does she need to exit canada and apply?
@scylla and
@armoured are covering your questions quite well. Be very wary of the jak posts, they are rife with misdirection, and her motives are highly suspect.
I will add that there are many conditions and contingencies involved in questions about your partner coming to Canada to stay. Lots of if this, then that, but if this other happens, then it can go this or that way, with more than a few not easily predicted forks in that path.
There are other parts of the forum for questions and discussions related to obtaining status to come to Canada. Especially matters related to obtaining work permits. Better to pursue related questions there.
While generally a Foreign National cannot work in Canada, it is nonetheless OK for a Foreign National, without status authorizing work, to engage in certain kinds of work while in Canada. This includes working for an employer outside Canada pursuant to an outside-Canada employment relationship. Or, as you describe it, while in Canada work remotely for the employer in another country.
That said, this can get tricky. And, moreover, if and when questions arise about it in relation to immigration processing, whether during an immigration Secondary examination at a PoE or in processing an application, there can be quite a lot of inconsistency in how different officials interpret things. For some any "
working" in Canada is "
working in Canada," for which proper status is required. This too is one of those been there, did that things, and I did it extensively over a very long period of time (years) during which I was also doing the so-called "
flagpoling" thing, and spending most of the year in Canada, for several years in a row. That was
THEN.
Things have changed. As
@scylla commented, being able to do this successfully these days is far less likely. Frankly, simply not likely. And it risks running into issues that can make getting future status more difficult. I strongly agree with the suggestion that applying for extensions of status while IN Canada is more likely to facilitate an extended stay. And otherwise following the rules, which is why I previously noted that the practical side of this equation can be the more difficult side; there may be some periods of separation, potentially lengthy periods, and that can be tough.
If You Are a Gambling Man:
I previously referenced the possibility of initiating the sponsored partner process before getting into compliance. NOT soon. Definitely not before you have an established a paper and digital trail documenting actual settlement in Canada, which takes time, and it takes actually settling here. And, as previously noted, the only NO-RISK approach is to wait until you have actually been IN Canada for more than 730 days within the previous five years.
If you come, and there are no problems at the PoE, and you stay . . . maybe after just a year, plus a bit perhaps, and depending on how things have gone with your partner joining you here for some or most of that time, you could consider revisiting the question about whether to start the sponsored partner process. No need to dig into this much now. Again, now is not the time. But once you are well settled, and recognizing things can easily change in a year, it might be worth considering going ahead, taking some RISK. It may be a good idea to go see a lawyer, for example, and get some professional advice about proceeding with the sponsored partner application even though you are still short (of RO compliance) . . . based on circumstances and the situation in a year, plus some.