The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsQ related to my dual citizenship Canada and how it might affect my disabled daughter
I am a dual citizen for years now. My father was born in Canada and never relinquished that citizenship, living on a green card in US his adult life.
About 20 years ago, I obtained dual dizenship for myself, obtainable because Dad never relinquished his.
NOW, in this current mess, I am wondering how to protect my adult disabled daughter. I don't intend to flee to Canada, but I do want to know how I can pass my citizenship on to her for her protection. She is U..S born, and is an adult.
Any thoughts?

Fiendish Thingy
(20,803 posts)Normally, parents cant sponsor adult children, but if your daughter is your legal dependent, there might be an exception.
DUU
(64 posts)The rules may not be obvious, and small steps taken in good faith could harm your daughters bid to have legal status.
You need a precise answer to protect your daughter.
viva la
(4,289 posts)I think Canada is probably a lot more hospitable in general to those in need. And the US is likely to get less and less helpful.
I hope you find she is a citizen already, by being born to a citizen, and you just have to prove that! Wouldn't that be great, and you could both move north if necessary.
I suspect with climate change, the north shore of Lake Superior is going to be paradise in a decade!
viva la
(4,289 posts)the official Canada.ca website for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC): https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/become-canadian-citizen/eligibility/already-citizen.html
Grasswire2
(13,845 posts)She is 55 years old. I obtained my dual citizenship in the last ten years, under the law that provided for children of citizens to also become citizens.
viva la
(4,289 posts)At least that would give you a good option.
Dan
(4,903 posts)Canadian citizenship through Parents.
Grandparents
Previous generations
Discretionary Grant
phone number: 416-827-8778
https://dfimmigration.ca/
Not sure how good it is...
DFW
(58,938 posts)My younger daughter, for whom I got citizenship at the US embassy in Germany within six weeks of her birth, wanted to get US citizenship for her daughters, also born in Germany, but of a German father.
In 1985, I walked into the US Embassy in Bonn at about 10:00 A.M. About two hours later, I walked out of there with her American birth certificate, her Social Security number, and her first US passport. Those were the days. To get citizenship for her daughters, she had to prove ten years of US residence, which, due to her years of US high school through Law School, she was barely able to do, and paperwork that it took her eleven months of appointments and piles of documents. But she was magna at her law school on the states, and made a living at dealing with such situations. Her daughters, now 5 and 7, are not only dual citizens of The EU (Germany) and the USA, but bilingual in German and American English. Our daughters wanted their children to have the same advantages we gave them, i.e. not only the right to choose (the paperwork), but the ability to take full advantage of that choice (fluency in both languages). The ten years of US residence was a requirement for our daughter to pass on her U.S. citizenship to her children. You had better see if Canada has a similar requirement to pass on Canadian citizenship. Not all countries do, so it may not even be an issue. My daughter in New York could have easily furnished proof of ten years of German residence to pass on German citizenship to her sons, but the Germans never requested it. Still, its better to know before you apply.
PS one funny footnote: while at her undergrad college in DC, she wanted to take a semester at the Sorbonne in Paris, which her college offered. We said sure, and she warned me Id have to fill out some paperwork. When I got it, one of the questions I had to answer was, are you 100% confident that your daughter possesses the necessary maturity to live in Europe for four months? I laughed, and said, OK someone at the university is not proofreading the paperwork they are sending me. I wrote back, after carefully considering that my daughter had the necessary maturity to be born in Europe, grow up in Europe, and go to school in Europe, I had come to the conclusion that she did indeed possess the necessary maturity to come back here for a semester. Her school, to their credit, wrote back to apologize for not checking her home address (Düsseldorf) before sending the application, on which they would have crossed out that question, had they been paying more attention.
RockCreek
(1,104 posts)please share. I may be doing some research too.
My grandfather was born in Canada to migrant workers from the US. He may not have even realized that he was Canadian. He fought for the US in WW2, but I don't think he ever obtained a US passport or did anything that would be stressful in terms of potentially challenging his US citizenship. He was that kind of person.
My mother has his birth certificate but may not have been eligible for dual citizenship until more recent law changes.
I am about your daughter's age, and would love to be a Canadian Citizen. Aside from the myriad practical reasons, I just love Canada!
viva la
(4,289 posts)Vast and diverse and full of beautiful places and people.
LauraInLA
(2,248 posts)experience, your daughter does not qualify. Our son (born in U.S.) gained Canadian citizenship because his father was born in Canada. If our son has children, they will only be eligible for Canadian citizenship if they are born in Canada. On the other hand, they will be eligible for U.S. citizenship because their dad (our son) was born in the US and both his parents were US citizens (stating just because of the current Orange policy projections).
Please do check my math. I hope Im wrong.