CAUTION: As usual, my observations will go long. My object is to explain not argue. Those not interested in my explanations should skip, scroll on by. Scroll on by what will likely be multiple posts.
Some queries offer an opportunity to address and explain fundamental elements of the issues, and important distinctions. Perhaps it is ironic, but a so-called "quick question" can evoke, demand even, the not-so-quick answer. Especially questions which are dependent on flawed premises, as well as questions for which an answer can better illuminate the nature and scope of what the REAL issues are. A failure to stay focused on the latter tends to be a persistent problem (tangents far from the real issues) in this topic, which primarily regards efforts to motivate IRCC toward getting citizenship application processing back on track.
For example, many of the questions posed in this topic, and related posts, suggesting that the knowledge-of-Canada test be eliminated in order to get processing moving, are inherently flawed because IRCC has NO AUTHORITY, NO POWER, to grant citizenship without engaging in a procedure to verify applicants have the REQUIRED knowledge of Canada. (And there is a ZERO, or at least very near ZERO prospect, the law might be amended to exclude a knowledge-of-Canada requirement.)
No advanced degrees in political science necessary to recognize that activism demanding what cannot possibly be delivered tends to be so obviously futile as to be frivolous. (Indicating it may be about something else.)
In any event, again, these observations by me GO LONG and many will want to skip, to scroll on by . . .
PART ONE:
. . . do you think a lawsuit is the thing we need to do about this?
I already have a lawyer, and this was the first thing I asked. You can't sue them because of that, in fact you can't sue them at all for something like this. There is nothing that compels them to give you the citizenship under one year, two, or more. The best you can do is file a writ of mandamus, by law this forces them to move forward with your file, but not always guaranteed. Canada is not the United States.
I concur in the gist of this. In particular, there is no time frame within which IRCC must process a citizenship application.
That said, the law does mandate that IRCC process citizenship applications. So, in addition to principles of fairness and justice generally, there is legal cause to advocate the government take appropriate steps to do what it is the law dictates it do, which includes processing citizenship applications.
Thus the primary cause advocated in this topic, that IRCC take steps to adapt to existing circumstances and adopt procedures to carry out its legislated duties, INCLUDING timely processing citizenship applications, INCLUDING the screening and verification of applicants' knowledge-of-Canada (the "testing" at issue), is both legitimate and well-founded. As I have often reiterated, we are far enough along in this pandemic situation that it is well past time for the government to adapt and do what it is legally mandated to do. It is time for IRCC to make appropriate accommodations in order to proceed with processing applications, including testing and interviewing citizenship applicants.
Which leads to some of the more complex elements of what is at stake, what the law prescribes, and what remedies are available.
Before diving into that . . .
"Canada is not the United States."
If I was of a certain religious bend, I'd utter a big, raucous even, "
amen."
To be clear, in regards to the observation that "
Canada is not the United States," that is something I emphatically agree with and applaud, and am otherwise very grateful it is the case.
But I do not see how this is relevant to the issue here.
If the suggestion is that better remedies would be available in the U.S. courts, compared to here, still NOT RELEVANT, but
not likely true either. While I am not all that well-acquainted with litigation against government bodies in Canada (I am NOT a Canadian lawyer for example), generally, so cannot offer an extensive comparison with the U.S., I am actually rather well acquainted with litigation in the U.S. and enough so to recognize how difficult it can be to successfully sue government bodies or officials there, which generally enjoy what is called "governmental immunity," unless particular provisions in the law waive this immunity. And this has been bolstered by a near-blanket extension of privilege and immunity for certain governmental bodies and functions. A repeat abuser of constitutional rights, for example, can shoot and kill a black man without cause or justification, and notwithstanding what amounts to clear racism in the management and administration of the government body the murderer is employed by, allowing the murder to repeatedly perpetrate abuses of power motivated by racism, if that body is "law enforcement" in the U.S. it enjoys an amount of privilege and immunity from suit that is, simply, grotesque.
So,
yeah, say it again, and applaud: "Canada is not the United States."
Beyond that . . .
Beyond that I'd quibble with some of the details. An application for a writ of mandamus is a type of lawsuit, for example, so it is a bit inconsistent to say IRCC cannot be sued but you can seek a writ of mandamus.
And, there is a difference between being able to sue and whether the suit will successfully result in the remedy sought. Thus, for example, yes you can sue IRCC. Whether you win or lose is a separate question. Even if you win, what you win is yet another question.
For example, if the facts show that IRCC is NOT processing an individual's citizenship application, not only can the individual "sue," but such proof should warrant an outcome in which a Federal Court issues an order compelling IRCC to proceed with processing. The applicable procedure for bringing such a lawsuit is an
application for a Writ of Mandamus. The order compelling IRCC to proceed with processing is called a "Writ of Mandamus."
HOWEVER, where nothing in the provisions of law, those dictating what the government body must do, prescribe a time within which the thing must be done, the passage of time itself is NOT proof the government is not doing that thing.
So, yeah, as
@sarafandee observes, there is nothing in the law compelling IRCC to complete processing a citizenship application within a specified period of time. So, correct, the passage of time, even two, three, or four years, is NOT enough to constitute proof the government has failed to do what it has a clear duty to do.
Very early on in this topic there was a false accusation that IRCC ceased processing citizenship applications. That was patently not true.
In certain circumstances an applicant could prove that the lack of proceeding with processing amounts to the same as denying the application, which would require a decision-making process meeting fair procedure requirements. Such proof could indeed establish grounds for a court to issue a Writ of Mandamus, an order compelling IRCC to properly process the application or render a proper decision denying it.
Some here have tried to dress up claims about the delays resulting from Covid-19 related measures by using certain Latin phrases, like asserting these delays in processing constitute a "
de facto" denial. No fancy language necessary, the burden to prove that a delay in processing constitutes an in-fact denial is very difficult to meet. Especially since the Courts have ruled, time and time again, that the mere passage of time does not suffice to establish grounds for Mandamus.
Which, again, leads to some of the more complex elements of what is at stake, what the law prescribes, and what remedies may be available.
To be addressed further in Part Two.