A ‘Birthright Citizenship’ Exception — From Canada: The pregnant Dutch crown princess and a quickie proclamation of ‘extraterritoriality’

Interesting:

“As the Supreme Court ponders the legality of restrictions President Trump is attempting to impose on “birthright citizenship” in the United States (expect a decision the day the justices leave town for the summer), one unique royal birth at an Ottawa hospital in the depths of World War II offers an exception to the jus soli laws in our neighbor to the north, which mirror our own. The question is whether it could be replicated in this country should the High Court not rule in the administration’s favor.

…Would It Work Here?

The question is whether a similar scheme could be replicated in this country to limit birthright citizenship to the newborn children of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents by declaring any place children are born of other parents as “extra-territorial”.

Legally, it’s a longshot, but keep in mind that: (1) when King George issued his proclamation, nobody knew where Princess Juliana would give birth, and thus extraterritoriality followed her wherever she went before giving birth; (2) that proclamation was issued and effective under the same common law principles the Court relied on in Wong; and (3) it is a precedent, albeit a unique and foreign one.

As for the first — and key — point, consider the following question from Justice Barrett during the oral argument in Trump v. Barbara, the pending birthright citizenship case, to the attorney opposing the president’s EO on the accepted principle that there’s an exception to U.S. birthright citizenship for the children of diplomats:

[I]f you look at the diplomatic exception almost like diplomats and their children have little bubbles around them, like the embassy is really the territory of that country, and even when they’re traveling around, they’re all not subject to the jurisdiction by virtue of this territorial fiction, are those just applications of the rule?

Princess Juliana wasn’t subject to a diplomatic exception (she was a refugee, not a diplomat), but the king’s proclamation created a “bubble” around the heir-apparent wherever she went up to the time of Princess Margriet’s birth in much the same way as the diplomatic bubble described by Justice Barrett applies.

Here, in part, is how counsel responded to the question: “So the thing that all of the exceptions have in common, again, is this sense that the — the person is — has this fiction of extraterritorial — extraterritoriality around them.

If the accepted exceptions to birthright citizenship (the former one for Indians, and the current ones for children of diplomats, and children born in zones of enemy occupation and on foreign ships) have a “fiction of extraterritoriality around them”, what impact would an actual presidential declaration of “extra-territoriality” have

To ask that question is to answer it, but it begs a second question: Can the president, acting on his own, declare parts of the United States to be “extraterritorial” for the brief moments that children of those who are not citizens or green card holders are born there?

Does a 1942 proclamation by the British monarch, issued to avoid a potential succession crisis in the Dutch royal house, offer a precedent an American president could follow to bar the children of aliens here illegally and/or temporarily from automatically receiving U.S. citizenship? It’s a question the White House may want to ask, assuming the Supreme Court gives him bad news on its way out of town.”

Source: The pregnant Dutch cown princess and a quickie proclamation of ‘extraterritoriality’

International students: Secondary and less share growing

Although not that surprising given the cuts to post-secondary international student levels, nevertheless striking how the share of secondary and less of all students has grown dramatically over the past number of years as per the following charts:

The numbers of secondary or less have stayed relatively stable, 2023-25, between 115,000 and 125,000. In contrast, numbers of post secondary fell from 544,000 to 263,000 and other studies from 47,000 to 21,000.

Unfortunately, appears to be few studies on this part of the education sector. ChatGPT did find this Global Affairs study that had the following conclusions:

“1. Global Affairs Canada – Elementary and Secondary Schools Sector Paper (2023)

This is probably the best national overview.

Key findings include:

  • Approximately 92,000 study permit holders were at the “secondary or less” level in 2022.
  • About 30,000 fee-paying international students were enrolled in Canadian public schools.
  • Most international students are concentrated at the secondary (high school) level.
  • British Columbia and Ontario account for more than 80% of K–12 international students.
  • School boards reported increasing competition for spaces due to population growth and immigration. “

Unfortunately, can’t find the actual study on the GAC website.

Seems like there may be some good masters thesis possibilities in this under-covered sector.

StatsCan: Racialized postsecondary Canadian students

Useful data visualizations broken down by new entrants and enrolled, visible minority group, gender, age, field of study. Some interesting variations by group, gender and field of study.

In terms of enrolled, Chinese have the highest percentage in STEM (40 percent) with Black’s the lowest (20 percent), followed by not visible minority (22 percent). For new entrants, similar pattern but with tighter percentage in STEM, Chinese (49 percent), Black (27 percent), not visible minority (29 percent).

Worth exploring.

Source: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/71-607-x/71-607-x2024020-eng.htm

US judge blocks Trump’s $100,000 H-1B visa fee for highly skilled foreign workers, calling it unlawful

Courts working (apart from SCOTUS):

A federal judge on Monday struck down a US$100,000 fee U.S. President Donald Trump imposed on new H-1B visas for highly skilled foreign workers, concluding that it constituted an unlawful tax Congress never authorized. 

U.S. District Judge Leo Sorokin in Boston issued the ruling in a lawsuit filed by 20 Democratic state attorneys general challenging a fee Trump announced in September that dramatically raised the cost of obtaining H-1B visas, which tech companies in particular rely heavily on to bring on foreign workers. 

The administration argued the fee constituted a lawful monetary penalty that the president was authorized to impose under federal immigration law, which gives him the power to restrict the entry of certain foreign nationals when he deems it “detrimental to the interests of the United States.”…

Source: US judge blocks Trump’s $100,000 H-1B visa fee for highly skilled foreign workers, calling it unlawful

Why is a Canadian literary magazine supporting ‘armed resistance’?

Good point. Not just literary magazines…:

…So far as I know, there isn’t a Canadian literary magazine devoting an issue to the hard work of mutual understanding and peaceful coexistence. If there was, I would contribute to it.

David Bezmozgis is a writer and filmmaker. His upcoming film, The Betrayers, will be released in 2026.

Source: Why is a Canadian literary magazine supporting ‘armed resistance’?

ICYMI – Urback: Ottawa will start tracking when temporary residents enter and exit. Perhaps it could consider actual enforcement too?

Agree:

…In other words, not only has Ottawa not been tracking when non-permanent residents enter and exit the country, it is also not taking enforcement action in cases where fraud has clearly been identified, thus leaving applicants’ files unblemished and clear to apply for permanent residency. 

But the department appears unperturbed. The same day as last week’s committee meeting, where Ms. Diab yielded to the gross inadequacies of Canada’s immigration monitoring systems, the minister announced that Ottawa is fast-tracking permanent residency for up to 33,000 temporary foreign workers. 

It’s a mess, of course, with some changes coming by the end of the year, by which time the government would have fast-tracked permanent residency for tens of thousands, and issued hundreds of thousands of new temporary permits. But perhaps while IRCC is experimenting with its new counting pilot, it might want to run a beta on actual enforcement, so we don’t accidentally grant permanent residency to someone who entered the country fraudulently, or allow those who are not legally permitted to remain in the country to stay. It’s just a thought – something to test out to decide if Canada, a purportedly serious country, wants to maintain it permanently.

Source: Ottawa will start tracking when temporary residents enter and exit. Perhaps it could consider actual enforcement too?

ICYMI – Globe editorial: Ottawa’s enduring problem of a surge in temporary workers

Mirrors CPC calls although sceptical that any government could resist business pressures for caregivers and LMIA Temporary Foreign Workers:

…IRCC is doing a better job at managing new arrivals, but it needs to do more to reduce the overall number of work permits. The temporary foreign worker program outside of agriculture should be wound down. It’s also time to take a closer look at the International Mobility Program. 

Immigration is a key driver of Canada’s prosperity, but more needs to be done to move away from the two-step immigration system of the last decade, and return to selecting the highest-skilled immigrants from abroad for permanent residency. Restoring balance has been too slow. The federal government shouldn’t pretend otherwise. 

Source: Ottawa’s enduring problem of a surge in temporary workers

ICC: Fixing Credential Barriers Could Add 16,000 Doctors and 27,000 Nurses to Canada’s Workforce

Useful report and analysis. Hard to see any substantial reason for not having quasi-automatic equivalency between the FPT regulatory bodies:

“…Key Findings

  • Nearly 640,000 immigrant degree-holders are overqualified, a figure that would fall to about 270,000 if immigrants were overqualified at the same rate as the Canadian-born.
  • Only 41 per cent of internationally trained physicians and 37 per cent of internationally trained nurses work in their fields, while 6.5 million Canadians lack a family doctor.
  • Closing the overqualification gap could add roughly 16,000 doctors and 27,000 nurses and related professionals to Canada’s workforce.
  • FQR and related employment barriers cost Canada up to $50 billion annually and weigh down its already weak labour productivity.
  • FQR discrimination has been well-known since at least 1966, yet overqualification has risen, not fallen, despite decades of advocacy efforts.

The report traces the problem to a fragmented system of roughly 500 self-governing licensing bodies, many of which apply discriminatory practices against immigrants with provinces’ tacit permission. The most notable is the “Canadian work experience” requirement that mandates Canadian experience as a condition of licensure but also requires candidates to have a license to gain Canadian experience. This catch-22, deemed discriminatory by the Ontario Human Rights Commission in 2013, is still common. Past reforms have relied on voluntary cooperation and patchy enforcement, leaving the underlying problem intact.

The report calls for a federal Fair Licensing Act, modelled on the Canada Health Act, to drive change across all professions and provinces at once. It recommends:

  • A Fair Licensing Act that rewards provinces removing barriers and withholds funds from those that do not.
  • An accompanying Canada Fair Licensing Transfer tied to measurable performance indicators.
  • Additional levers, such as Provincial Nominee Program allocations, to reinforce compliance.
  • A dedicated Division within Employment and Social Development Canada producing an annual report to Parliament.
  • A Fair Licensing Act Secretariat within the Forum of Labour Market Ministers to coordinate federal-provincial cooperation.

“The Canada Health Act shows the federal government can set national standards on matters of provincial jurisdiction and reward those who meet them. A Fair Licensing Act could do the same for licensing, in every profession and every province at once,” added Bernhard. “Canada doesn’t need marginal improvements. We need a big change across the board, to put immigrant talent to work addressing the needs they were brought here to address.”

Source: Fixing Credential Barriers Could Add 16,000 Doctors and 27,000 Nurses to Canada’s Workforce

Globe editorial: How to punch a hole in the sails of Alberta separatists [immigration]

Some suggestions:

…The same is true for immigration. Negotiating a deal like Quebec’s, under which the province largely has control over who can settle there, would be a complicated and lengthy process. But Mr. Carney could quickly agree to other fixes while working toward longer term symmetry between Quebec and Alberta.

Those fixes could include increasing the provinces’ allocation under the provincial nominee program and letting them have a greater say over what kind of workers they need. Ottawa could also agree to provide the provinces with funding to house and care for temporary workers – a beef that isn’t limited to Alberta….

Source: How to punch a hole in the sails of Alberta separatists

Keller: Canada’s economy used to look better than it really was. Now, it’s the opposite

Good take:

…The conclusion to draw is not that immigration makes Canada poorer, or that a shrinking population is the route to prosperity. As for the Trudeau government’s belief that rapid population growth would automatically make us all richer, that’s not true either.

What happened prior to 2025 is that immigration outpaced business investment. The number of workers grew faster than the number of tools. That delivered more production, but declining productivity. Our immigration system also became focused on recruiting low-wage workers – another route for suppressing GDP per capita.

The Canadian economic pie is now 7.3 per cent larger than it was at the start of 2022. But per capita GDP, the average slice of pie, still has not recovered to where it was four years ago. 

Source: Canada’s economy used to look better than it really was. Now, it’s the opposite