ToucheI think the bill will be passed before Canada Day, most probably. Liberals will try to make it historic 'citizenship bill' by passing it before Canada 150. This is my personal opinion/analysis.
ToucheI think the bill will be passed before Canada Day, most probably. Liberals will try to make it historic 'citizenship bill' by passing it before Canada 150. This is my personal opinion/analysis.
There is no doubt they will try, but it doesn't mean it will actually happen. Many people 'try' to win lottery every week and only a few would actually win.I think the bill will be passed before Canada Day, most probably. Liberals will try to make it historic 'citizenship bill' by passing it before Canada 150. This is my personal opinion/analysis.
Suppose to start at 3pmanyone has the link to watch the vote?
this is the final countdown everyone.. good luck to everyone who needs this
Here it is http://parlvu.parl.gc.ca/XRender/anyone has the link to watch the vote?
this is the final countdown everyone.. good luck to everyone who needs this
It is called democracy and the rules of the house. According to the standing rules, you are only allowed to debate the parts that are being amended, not the bill as a whole or unamended provisions. This bill already went through all the stages in the house, they didn't reopen the whole debate (thankfully they didn't) because, again, they weren't even allowed to. This rule is hard to be enforced (that's why that one conservative MP rambled on for a whole 2.5 hours about whatever), but the majority honours that rule: The debate must only be about the amendments.It is funny to watch how MP s and senators are discussing in length the parts of the bill which affects small percentage of citizenship applicants (terrorists, part of the older population, orphans, cheaters).
But I do not remember that anyone, nor position, nor opposition members, ever touched/attacked the part that affects all applicants - the 3/5 rule and pre PR credit.
Well, I think it is called democracy.
And also I think that the bill will get the assent before the Canada day only if there is a behind-the-scene deal between liberals and conservatives. Otherwise the conservatives in the senate will do everything to further delay it.
Residency requirements still apply for minors, it only makes them able to apply in the case their parents wouldn't have language requirements or would fail the citizenship test for example. They still have to satisfy to the criterias themselvesHi Guys,
If the bill will pass in this form, does that mean all minors will be able to apply for citizenship alone? Like in the case of a family of two parents and one child, does that mean the child can apply for the citizenship before his parents as the conditions of physical presence is not mandatory for the minors?
Your response is very appreciated
Thanks for your reply, but I think the physical presence period does not apply for minor (correct me if I am wrong), I read on the immigration site:Residency requirements still apply for minors, it only makes them able to apply in the case their parents wouldn't have language requirements or would fail the citizenship test for example. They still have to satisfy to the criterias themselves
This is under the current rule when minors can only apply with their qualifying adult parents.Thanks for your reply, but I think the physical presence period does not apply for minor (correct me if I am wrong), I read on the immigration site:
Time you have lived in Canada
You must have been physically present in Canada as a permanent resident for at least:
When calculating how long you have lived in Canada, you can only count time spent after you became a permanent resident.
- 1,460 days during the six years right before the date you sign your application
- 183 days during each of four calendar years that are fully or partially within the six years right before the date you apply
These requirements don’t apply to children under 18.
First of all, it makes zero sense to look at the CIC website to understand the new rules that C-6 will implement. The whole point of C-6 is to change the rules explained on the CIC website.Thanks for your reply, but I think the physical presence period does not apply for minor (correct me if I am wrong), I read on the immigration site:
Time you have lived in Canada
You must have been physically present in Canada as a permanent resident for at least:
When calculating how long you have lived in Canada, you can only count time spent after you became a permanent resident.
- 1,460 days during the six years right before the date you sign your application
- 183 days during each of four calendar years that are fully or partially within the six years right before the date you apply
These requirements don’t apply to children under 18.