When Donald Trump was first elected in 2016, New York State resident Ellen Robillard briefly looked into getting Canadian citizenship. Her mother, after all, was born in Nova Scotia.
As a Democrat, Robillard was despondent at the election results, but she abandoned the idea after realizing that her young son wouldn’t be eligible for citizenship under a law that barred Canadians born abroad from passing their citizenship to children if they were also born outside Canada.
In 2023, however, the Canadian courts ruled that law unconstitutional and the changes to eligibility came into effect in December, suddenly opening up a pathway to Canadian citizenship for many Americans at a time of political upheaval, violence and uncertainty in the US.
Robillard, 52, is applying for citizenship with her son now that the first-generation rule has been scrapped.
Since criteria for citizenship expanded with the passage of Bill C-3 of Canada’s Citizenship Act, millions of Americans have become eligible to claim Canadian citizenship. The amendment reverses a “first-generation” limit imposed by Canada’s Conservative government in 2009.



The British government has said Jordan's custodianship of Jerusalem's holy sites "must be respected" in a...
The United States has announced fresh economic sanctions on Cuba’s president and some of his immediate...
A Russian drone struck a private residential home in Konotop late Thursday evening, injuring five civilians,...
North Korea on Thursday unveiled a new facility to produce nuclear bomb fuels, with leader Kim...





























