As I previously observed, and clarified, PR-citizenship-applicants relocating outside Canada after applying, while the citizenship application is in process, is not new. In fact, as I also noted, Harper government concerns, going back more than a decade, about
applicants-applying-on-the-way-to-the-airport, were a dominate issue motivating some of the more draconian provisions in the SCCA (Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act), including in particular the so-called "
intent to reside" requirement (promptly repealed by Liberal government Bill C-6).
For applicants who relocate abroad after applying, while the application is pending, there are inherent risks that are similar to risks all applicants have but which are bigger risks for the applicant abroad; these include
-- logistical risks like missing notices, failing to timely respond to requests, travel problems causing a failure to appear for a scheduled event, and
-- procedural risks related to non-routine processing, mostly RQ-related but also security-screening-related, which may be aggravated or even triggered by IRCC's perceptions of the applicant living abroad
These are discussed in some depth in multiple topics in the Citizenship forum.
What may seem "new" is that given the impact of Covid on processing times, more PR-citizenship-applicants living abroad might actually encounter the possibility of delays in processing so long they run into RO compliance issues before being scheduled for the oath.
As I have noted, however, even this is not really new. This happened before, roughly between 2011 and 2013, when there was a system-wide slow down in processing timelines, which began in 2009/2010, and was due to Harper government policies and practices aimed cracking down on BOTH outright fraud but also applicants the Harper government perceived to be
pursuing-a-passport-of-convenience, typically indicated (as government officials and others perceived it) by the applicant
applying-on-the-way-to-the-airport.
When the processing timeline for citizenship applications was a year or less (mine was eight months, almost to the day, between mailing the application to the day I took the oath; for many at my ceremony the processing timeline was six months), very, very few citizenship applicants who went abroad after applying would get anywhere near a Residency Obligation compliance issue. Even applicants encountering big delays due to things like RQ-related non-routine processing were still getting through the process, and scheduled for the oath, in less than two years, only occasionally longer and rarely three years. So, between roughly 2013 and 2020 this issue did not come up much because so few applicants living abroad after applying had a RO compliance issue.
Along came Covid and processing delays. Similar to what happened in 2011 to 2013, when there was a system-wide slow down in processing timelines, for those applicants whose process gets tangled in more complex and time delaying non-routine processing (like full-blown RQ, serious security screening issues, complicated prohibitions issues) the timeline can go long enough that an applicant living abroad runs into RO compliance issues.
Which I am guessing is at least in part the context giving rise to your query about this. More than a few 2019 applicants have already had their applications in process for more than two years, and if they encounter non-routine processing delays on top of this, there might indeed be a significant number of applicants for whom the process takes three years. If they have been living abroad after applying, three years abroad is the threshold for a RO compliance issue. (And if they had spent much time abroad during the two years just before applying, it could come sooner.)
Discussions about living abroad after applying for citizenship (again, mostly in the Citizenship forum) often reference this risk (in addition to the others), but in recent years (up to recently) this was with less and less emphasis because processing timelines were fast enough (until Covid) this was less and less a practical concern. In fact, many forum participants were casually and sometimes emphatically responding to queries about living abroad after applying with "No Problem" (often omitting reference to the elevated logistical and procedural risks, and thus to my view those casual assurances were misleading).
Which brings this, finally, to the subject of your comments I quote above: attitudes about citizenship applicants who move abroad after applying for citizenship.
I do not, as some might say, have
a dog in the fight. My attention in and approach to these matters is virtually laser-focused on figuring out how things actually work, not how people believe they should work. If I mention how something "
should work" I am almost always referring to how it should go according to the law and rules and known policies and practices. (Some perceive this to be a bias favouring the status quo, and in a sense it has that effect; but I rely on the benefits of being focused on how things actually works and that helps figure out how to best navigate the system.)
In any event, it warrants cautioning that there is indeed, in fact, a powerful, broad-based, deeply rooted concern among Canadians about granting citizenship to those many would describe as
applying-on-the-way-to-the-airport. This is real. The repeal of the SCCA "
intent to reside" provision did not mean those attitudes went away. This attitude is a big part of why those living abroad after applying face a substantially greater risk of RQ-related non-routine processing. While the Conservatives are more militant about this, many NDP and Liberal leaning Canadians also share this attitude. In fact, it was during a Liberal government, back in 2005, that screening citizenship applicants' passports for indications they were just returning to Canada from abroad in time to take the test or to attend the oath became part of the standard practices; this was a formally articulated
reason-to-question-residency, meaning something that would trigger RQ . . . even though days outside Canada after applying are not a part of the calculation (not then, when there was a residency requirement, and not now with the physical presence requirement; the calculation of this qualifying requirement is exclusively about the eligibility period, not at all about after applying).
Others can discuss the reasons for this attitude. Again, my focus is on what in fact influences how things actually work.
We might get a picture of how much influence this attitude continues to have in the wake of covid related measures pursuant to which a significant number of applicants are taking the knowledge of Canada test abroad. It will be interesting to see if the reporting and tracking reveals any significant difference between post-test processing times for those who took the test IN Canada versus those abroad at the time of the test. My crystal ball is indisposed and otherwise this is a difficult one to forecast. There is at least a significant risk those who took the test outside Canada will encounter longer post-test timelines before getting to the oath. How it will actually go, though, best we can do is wait and see.