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Today in Canada > News > ‘Lost Canadians’ can now get citizenship while update to law faces delays
News

‘Lost Canadians’ can now get citizenship while update to law faces delays

Press Room
Last updated: 2025/03/13 at 3:14 PM
Press Room Published March 13, 2025
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Politics

Immigration Minister Marc Miller is giving so-called “lost Canadians” a chance to receive Canadian citizenship, now that court-mandated legislation will not be passed by the deadline.

Government received 3 extensions to pass new law

David Baxter · The Canadian Press · Posted: Mar 13, 2025 2:05 PM EDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marc Miller
The Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruled in 2023 that it was unconstitutional for the ‘lost Canadians’ born abroad to not qualify for citizenship. Immigration Minister Marc Miller says those people can now obtain citizenship. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

Immigration Minister Marc Miller is giving so-called “lost Canadians” a chance to receive Canadian citizenship, now that court-mandated legislation will not be passed by the deadline.

“Lost Canadians” is a term applied to people who were born outside of the country to Canadian parents who were also born in another country.

In 2009, the Conservative government changed the law so that people who were born abroad could not pass down their citizenship unless their child was born in Canada.

The Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruled in late 2023 that the law was unconstitutional and the current Liberal government agreed with the ruling.

Since that ruling, the government received three extensions to the deadline to pass legislation extending citizenship to those affected by the law.

Miller says the government is applying for a 12-month extension to the current March 19 deadline and allowing for “discretionary” citizenship grants for affected people and for potential “lost Canadians” who have a parent with citizenship who has spent at least three cumulative years in Canada.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David Baxter is a reporter with The Canadian Press

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