Ok, I get what you guys are saying... and I have agreed with you all the way along. I, and Paul for that matter, are not Canadian in my eyes.
But.... he may have convinced me he has it right. On the 3(1)(e) bit.... follow us on this.
His Dad has his citizenship restored in 2009, we call agree on that? Under section 3(1)(f).
Persons who are citizens
3 (1) Subject to this Act, a person is a citizen if ....
- (f) before the coming into force of this paragraph, the person ceased to be a citizen for any reason other than the following reasons and did not subsequently become a citizen:
Ok. So that's covered. He lost is due to non-retention, which is not one of the things listed in (f) that still takes away citizenship.
His Citizenship is also backdated to when he lost it by section 7
7 Despite any provision of this Act or any Act respecting naturalization or citizenship that was in force in Canada at any time before the day on which this subsection comes into force....
(d) a person referred to in paragraph (1)(f) — other than a person described in paragraph (c) — is deemed to be a citizen under paragraph (1)(f) from the time the person ceased to be a citizen;
Ok. All good so far.
Section 3(3) STOPS the further passing of citizenship.....
3 (3) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person born outside Canada
- (a) if, at the time of his or her birth or adoption, only one of the person’s parents is a citizen and that parent is a citizen under paragraph (1)(b), (c.1), (e), (g) or (h), or both of the person’s parents are citizens under any of those paragraphs; or
- (b) if, at any time, only one of the person’s parents was a citizen and that parent was a citizen under any of the following provisions, or both of the person’s parents were citizens under any of the following provisions:
- (i) paragraph 4(b) or 5(b) of the Canadian Citizenship Act, S.C. 1946, c. 15,
And his Dad was a section 4(b) baby originally.
All done and dusted right?
Wrong.
New amendments.... in 2014 section 3(3) is changed.....
3 (3) Paragraphs (1)(b) and (f) to (j) do not apply to a person born outside Canada
- (a) if, at the time of his or her birth, only one of the person’s parents was a citizen and that parent was a citizen under paragraph (1)(b), (c.1), (e), (g) or (h), or both of the person’s parents were citizens under any of those paragraphs; or
- (b) if, at any time, only one of the person’s parents was a citizen and that parent was a citizen under any of the following provisions, or both of the person’s parents were citizens under any of the following provisions:
- (i) paragraph 4(b) or 5(b) of the Canadian Citizenship Act, S.C. 1946, c. 15,
So.... if Paul can be a citizen under and but (b) and (f) to (j) it can still be passed to him.
So, section 3(1)(e) in the same 2014 version of the laws....
(e) the person was entitled, immediately before February 15, 1977, to become a citizen under paragraph 5(1)(b) of the former Act;
Now, I was unsure on this... told him it didn't apply to him. but then he showed me this in the Canadian Government web site.....
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/publications-manuals/operational-bulletins-manuals/canadian-citizenship/acquisition-loss/acquisition.html
And the part specifically in 3(1)(e) in the current Act....
Delayed registration of birth outside Canada (citizenship by descent) [paragraph 3(1)(e)]
Citizen’s date of birth: between January 1, 1947, and February 14, 1977
Paragraph 3(1)(e) sets out that a person is a Canadian citizen if that person was entitled, immediately before February 15, 1977, to become a citizen under paragraph 5(1)(
b) of the 1947 Act. A person is therefore a Canadian citizen if they were born outside Canada between January 1, 1947, and February 14, 1977, to a Canadian parent and were eligible and required to be registered as citizens born outside Canada
but did not do so within two years after the person’s birth or within an extended period authorized by the Minister. Under paragraph 5(1)(
b) of the 1947 Act, only a person born in wedlock to a Canadian citizen father or a child born out of wedlock to a Canadian citizen mother was entitled to be registered as a citizen.
And... that seems to be What he was on about all along. Those people in his boat ARE citizens.... exempted from the first generation cut-off specifically because the arguments he was mounting earlier around their original eligibility under 5(1)(b) of the original act seeing them as first generation abroad after Citizenship became an actual thing.
Thoughts?