I am U.S.-born, Canadian-raised and married to a Canadian. I am planning on eventually naturalizing my Canadian-born baby daughter under section 322 of the U.S. INA, as she is not eligible for automatic citizenship due to my own lack of time spent living in the U.S.
If I do this while she is young enough, she obviously won't be required to take the oath of citizenship. However, should we wait a while (part of it is deciding whether to abandon the citizenship of a third country which she currently holds, and perhaps letting her have some say in it when she's older), such that she *is* old enough to have the oath administered, does anyone know if Canada gives any legal effect to the stipulation from the oath of allegiance that the naturalized person "absolutely and entirely renounce[s] and abjure[s] all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state or sovereignty of whom or which [she has] heretofore been a subject or citizen"?
I suspect not, as Canada has a formal process of renunciation that would not have been undertaken, but I haven't found much concrete proof either way.
Also, does anyone know at what age the U.S. authorities begin administering that oath?
Legal effect in Canada of U.S. oath of citizenship
Moderator: Jim Eiss