McDutch said:
Why is it silly?
You use the Family Class sponsorship program to be (re-united) with your loved one, not to take advantage of Canada's Awesomeness.
If all of a sudden your spouse turns into an abusive douche, you book a ticket back. Why stick around?
If the sponsored spouse has established a life in Canada, and completely dismantled and abandoned their life elsewhere, of course they would stay, isn't that a no-brainer? I would consider staying in Canada if my marriage fails (abuse or no abuse), but it would depend on how well established I am in Canada at that point. I don't think Canada is significantly more or less awesome than my home country, so for me it's not a matter of 'taking advantage', it's about being where my life is rather than being where my life isn't at that moment. My life consists of more than just my marriage.
Leaving the country would also most likely mean the abuser would never be held to account, which seems like a really poor outcome from a legal standpoint.
For some it might not be as simple as booking a ticket home, particularly if the abuser is also the one who controls the finances. Hopefully somebody in that situation could call upon someone else to quietly help them with money to get the heck out, but the brilliance of some abusers is that they are manipulative enough to convince their partner to sever ties with the people around them (who would normally act as their support network) and to even make them think it was their own idea.
I would much prefer that somebody can seek support groups locally and work out a way to get on their feet, and then they can choose to stay or leave depending on where they feel their life is the most. That to me seems better than requiring somebody to hand themselves in to CBSA to get deported to somewhere where they have nothing, having given up their previous life to be with the person in Canada. My attitude to abuse victims isn't generally "you're on your own, buddy". It seems a bit heartless.
Your view seems to suggest that no sponsored spouse should ever naturalise in Canada because they were only ever in Canada to be with their loved one, and if that relationship ends then they ought to leave, regardless of all other circumstances. We all know real life is more complex than that.
Obviously this abuse/neglect get-out clause is open to abuse, but the whole system was already open to abuse.
To me, it would be simpler if there could be a rule saying that relationships that end within two years can be reported and will be investigated for possible immigration fraud. Then those found to be fraudulent will lose PR and be removed from Canada, and those found to be legitimate can retain PR and can choose themselves if they stay or leave. It achieves exactly the same thing without opening the door to 'crying wolf' situations, which if anything is even worse than just simply being used for PR and dumped.