I would note one point distinct from @dpenabill - a court case that is well-crafted and solidly founded can itself contribute to political pressure or other positive outcomes, such as government deciding to devote resources to hasten resolution and remove the issue from the political arena.
In addition to agreeing with much of the rest of that post and your posts above, this comment is a good and important point. And at some juncture, SOME citizenship applicants may very well want to press their case.
And yes, this is something to be done with a lawyer's advice and by a lawyer . . . applications for Mandamus are tricky and I have heard Canadian lawyers say that most applications (generally, not just immigration or citizenship cases) are rejected due to a lawyer's failure to properly follow the procedures. That is, not on the merits. And properly pleading the merits is itself complicated and tricky.
But yes, if and when some applicants are in a position to make appropriate applications for a Writ of Mandamus, just doing this can significantly elevate the pressure on IRCC to address the underlying problem.
More than that, trying to not wander too far into the weeds about Mandamus, remember that an absolute prerequisite for making a proper Mandamus application is a FORMAL demand that the Minister do what the Minister has a clear duty to do. I alluded to this before. It is OK and when done with due discretion, and politely, it is a good idea, for applicants to OCCASIONALLY send IRCC a communication asking that IRCC take action to process the application.
And this could be followed up with a more formally structured request, "demand," by a lawyer.
This is one of the ways in which individual applicants can help to keep the pressure on.
When to go the next step, when to make an actual application for a Writ of Mandamus, is a more difficult decision. Again, this is very much lawyer-necessary territory. In addition to tricky procedural hurdles, the burden of proof and the legal standard are high. As noted, for there to be grounds to issue a Writ of Mandamus it must be well-established that the Minister has failed to do a duty that it is clear the Minister must do under the law. And since there is no time period prescribed for processing citizenship applications, the passage of time itself will NOT suffice.
For Clarification:
. . . PRs resident in Canada have almost all of the same rights as citizens - freedom of movement, etc. (I believe most exceptions to this are relatively well-grounded in law or not easily challenged if the differences amount to inconveniences).
Not sure what you mean in regards to "
freedom of movement" rights. But, to be clear, the one big exception where PRs do not have the same Charter rights as citizens, is in regards to "
mobility rights." In particular, Charter Section 6.(1) specifically prescribes the "
mobility" rights protected by the Charter for "
every citizen of Canada." In contrast, Charter Section 6.(2) prescribes "
mobility" rights protected by the Charter for "
every citizen of Canada and every person who has the status of a permanent resident of Canada . . . "
see
https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/Const/page-15.html
In common language terms, the gist of the difference is that the Charter protects the right of CITIZENS to travel internationally, but does NOT protect the right of a PR to travel internationally. I discussed this previously in this topic because it has an impact on the viability, the persuasiveness, of some of the positions argued in this topic. In particular, to the extent a few have argued that grant citizenship application processing should be given some priority BECAUSE they need citizenship in order to carry on business requiring international travel, or for other international travel needs, this is NOT something likely to carry much weight. It is fairly clear that the capacity for PRs to travel internationally is not generally restrained by Canadian law (albeit subject to residency requirements, which is true for citizens as well, in addition to the PR Residency Obligation imposed on PRs), but it is also NOT supported or protected. The legal capacity of a PR to travel internationally, and the protections afforded a PR's right to travel internationally, are almost entirely dependent on what passport the PR carries.
BUT the real problem, for purposes of advancing the effort to get the government moving on citizenship application processing, is not so much that the
need-citizenship-to-travel-internationally argument likely carries fairly little weight (with the Canadian government and considering priorities), but the connotative implications which typically accompany or are triggered by this argument. And this too has popped up in this topic. This argument tends to trigger concerns about "
passport-shopping," people seeking a "
passport-of-convenience," or those who are "
applying-on-the-way-to-the-airport." This is NOT intended to comment on HOW others should see or respond to this issue. Rather, it is to recognize that many, and perhaps a large majority of Canadians, apprehend there is still a serious problem allowing too many to abuse the Canadian immigration system in this way, that is, to obtain a "
passport-of-convenience" or otherwise engage in "
passport-shopping." And as happened here, when this "need" is argued to support the cause here, it tends to draw fire and become a distraction.
To be clear, these observations are not polemic or about
how-it-should-be. In contrast,
how-it-really-is necessarily shapes the serious activist's positions and arguments. Effective activism not only focuses on picking battles, it focuses on avoiding distractions or disruptions.