Question on your comment : No immigration status(PR and Citizenship specifically) requires you to intend to permanently reside in Canada. While, I agree immigration programs are designed with the idea that beneficiary would live forever. But at the end of the day, it is left to individual to decide what best for him. Hence, no question of honest/dishonest in intent. Do you agree?
To be eligible for a PR visa, and to be eligible to complete the landing process to become a PR, a Foreign National must intend to settle permanently in Canada. (Discussed at length in the PR Obligations part of the forum, with citation and links to applicable IRPA and IRPR provisions prescribing this.)
It is readily apparent that CBSA border officials conducting the landing procedure do not strictly enforce this requirement. More than a few new PRs are obviously doing what is called a "
soft landing" (and so are obviously not intending to settle in Canada permanently at that time) when they take that final step to become a PR, and there is almost no hint CBSA immigration officials have any problem with this (with some rare exceptions processing those obtaining a PR visa as provincial nominees).
Moreover, there is minimal indication that IRCC screens this "
intent" element much in processing PR visa applications, with some exceptions. The most common, salient exception is in processing family class sponsorship of spouses. This is explicit in applications sponsored by Canadian citizens living abroad, in which the sponsor and sponsored spouse must affirmatively declare a positive plan to move to Canada to stay in order to qualify. It has also shown up in isolated cases where the spouse is a former PR who has lost PR due to a failure to comply with the Residency Obligation, and is being sponsored for PR by their spouse; in the PR Obligations part of the forum I cited and linked an actual case (officially published) in which the application was denied on the grounds the sponsored spouse did not have the intent to settle permanently in Canada -- so the take-away from this is that even though a PR who remains abroad, typically for work purposes, has a safety net if their spouse is a Canadian (either a PR or citizen) who can sponsor them to regain PR status, they should not go through the sponsoring process unless and until the PR working abroad
is ready to come to Canada to stay.
NONE of which dictates what any Canadian must intend once they are a Canadian. So, once the landing procedure is completed, and a person becomes a Canadian with Permanent Resident status, there are no limitations on where they intend to live or work. For PRs, of course, who do not have the international mobility rights guaranteed a Canadian citizen, where they actually live and work can affect their status, and a failure to comply with the RO can lead to the loss of PR status.
All of which is important context.
So, the query itself: ". . . at the end of the day, it is left to individual to decide what best for him. Hence, no question of honest/dishonest in intent."
There is a huge difference between what can be grounds for a decision affecting an individual's status versus what can influence the scope of investigation conducted by a total-stranger-bureaucrat who is processing an application.
-- Grounds (reasons) for a decision must be according to the particular law and rules applicable to that procedure. For example, a Citizenship Officer cannot deny an application for citizenship because the officer has concluded the applicant does not intend to reside in Canada (under current law, subject to change).
-- Reasons to conduct a more comprehensive and extensive investigation of an applicant are NOT limited in this way. For example, even though the Citizenship Officer cannot identify any particular dishonesty by the applicant, just the officer's perception of dishonesty on the part of the applicant (which can include perceptions of dishonest intent), AT ANY STAGE in the immigration process (going back to applications for PR or refugee status for example, or in the course of any Port-of-Entry examinations when arriving in Canada), can lead to elevated scrutiny, non-routine investigatory processing, and potentially overt suspicion and skepticism in the officer's assessment of the facts.
So, I am not clear what you mean by "
no question of honest/dishonest in intent," but how things go can be affected by how officials perceive an immigrant's intentions, even if that does not constitute grounds for making a negative decision . . . for many, just the delay and inconvenience of more severe forms of non-routine processing is something best avoided . . . and for some, there is a risk that elevated scrutiny and a more probing investigation will lead to finding grounds for a negative decision.
Meanwhile: qualified applicants for citizenship who have been honest in their dealing with CBSA and IRCC, truthful and not evasive in the information they provide, have no reason to worry . . . regardless where they are living after applying for citizenship.
Those who have been playing games, well, it depends.
Which is why most of us politely respond to personal questions asked by border officials rather than a snarly "
what's it to ya pal?" Yeah, perceptions about our demeanor can influence how things go.