An RCMP Blackhawk helicopter patrols at Roxham Road, which has been used as an unofficial crossing point between the U.S. state of New York and the Canadian province of Quebec, along the Canada-U.S. border in Champlain, New York, U.S., Jan. 19.Carlos Osorio/Reuters
U.S. President Donald Trump’s raft of policy changes on his first day in office, including rolling back rights of transgender people and ending citizenship as a birthright in the United States, are expected to lead to a rise in claims for asylum in Canada, immigration experts say.
He signed a suite of executive orders on Monday evening tightening up immigration rules, including to bolster the U.S.’s southern border. The White House confirmed that he plans to suspend refugee resettlement in the U.S., end asylum for illegal border crossers, and enhance vetting and screening of foreign nationals.
Among the slew of executive orders is one reversing a policy that means anyone born in the U.S. automatically becomes an American citizen. Citizenship as a birthright is guaranteed by a constitutional amendment and is one of the measures in the President’s program expected to prompt legal challenges. Speaking to reporters as he signed the orders Monday evening, the President said he thought the orders would withstand such challenges.
Canadian immigration lawyer Yameena Ansari said the change to the birthright rule, if implemented, would mean that some children born to immigrants in the U.S. may be stateless, which she said breached international law. She predicted that such a policy could lead to more minors turning up at the Canadian border to seek a safe haven.
“Trump is breaching the U.S.’s own international-rights commitments by making large swaths of the population stateless,” she said.
In his inaugural address on Monday, Mr. Trump said the U.S. government would also adopt a policy of recognizing only male and female genders. He signed an executive order on Monday night effectively reversing the gender-related policies of his predecessor, Joe Biden.
In 2022, the Biden administration permitted U.S. citizens to select a gender-neutral “X” on passports.
Mr. Trump is expected to direct the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security to ensure that official government documents, including passports and visas, only recognize two genders.
Canadian immigration lawyer David Garson said since Mr. Trump’s election victory he has received multiple inquiries from non-binary and transgender Americans, as well as U.S. parents of transgender children, about moving to Canada.
He said the policy changes are likely to spark more asylum claims at the Canadian border from anxious people, including transgender U.S. citizens fearful of infringement of their rights. He also predicted an increase in asylum claims from pregnant, undocumented migrants who fear not just deportation, but that their child could be stateless if born in the U.S.
Mr. Trump’s executive orders would mean “more people coming to Canada or the Canadian border over all,” Mr. Garson said.
Executive orders rolling back transgender rights and further tightening up asylum in the U.S. could also have an impact on its Safe Third Country Agreement with Canada, experts predict.
Under the agreement, most foreign nationals claiming asylum at the border are automatically returned to the U.S., but immigration experts say Mr. Trump’s policies may lead to a reassessment of whether the U.S. is now safe for particular groups.
The changes in the U.S. could lead to the consideration of more “carve-outs,” meaning that some groups – as currently with unaccompanied minors – are not sent back to the U.S.
Immigration lawyer Maureen Silcoff said that under refugee law, Canada has an obligation to consider whether there are marked differences between Canadian and American standards of protection.
“Legally speaking. it could mean that the Governor in Council might decide to de-designate the U.S. as a safe third country,” she said.
Canada has the power to suspend the Safe Third Country Agreement and would have the power to enact additional public-interest exemptions to help people facing persecution if they were returned to the U.S.
Canada does not return people to the U.S. if they have been charged with an offence that could subject them to the death penalty.
A White House briefing Monday said that “the Department of Justice will seek the death penalty as the appropriate punishment for heinous crimes against humanity, including … illegal migrants who maim and murder Americans.”
In his inauguration speech, Mr. Trump announced plans to declare a national emergency at the southern border with Mexico to allow defence resources to be deployed there, but did not mention mobilizing the military to guard the northern border with Canada. However, speaking to reporters, the President reiterated plans to impose tariffs on Canadian and Mexican goods, restating concerns about illegal migrant crossings and fentanyl smuggling.
Public Safety Minister David McGuinty said there is a plan in place to secure the border and federal officials met on the weekend to finalize it.
“It’s important for folks to understand if they’re planning on trying to cross the border in between our ports of entry, it is illegal to do so, and it’s dangerous to do so,” Mr. McGuinty told reporters Monday before a federal cabinet retreat began in Montebello, Que.
He said no one should doubt Canada’s commitment to preventing illegal migration.
“I think our American counterparts now have understood on the border, at least, there’s very little daylight between us domestically, and very little daylight between us and the United States,” Mr. McGuinty said.
He said Canada is working “hand in glove” with Americans and the provinces on border controls.
Rennée LeBlanc Proctor, spokesperson for Immigration Minister Marc Miller, said that “last week, Minister Miller and Minister McGuinty outlined the significant work that has, over the course of the last year, gone into ensuring the integrity of our immigration system and the safety of our Canada/US border.”
“The Safe Third Country Agreement exists to ensure the integrity of that border and remains in effect. We will not speculate on future policy decisions or measures, particularly those of a foreign government,” she said.