1 in 7 Rhode Islanders Now Eligible for Canadian Citizenship


REVEALED: One in seven Rhode Islanders handed Canadian passports in stunning legal bombshell

It is the escape hatch absolutely nobody saw coming.

In a seismic shift that has immigration lawyers scrambling, a dramatic change to Canadian law has suddenly flung open the doors to dual citizenship for hundreds of thousands of Americans.

The target? Rhode Island.

Thanks to Bill C-3, an estimated one in seven residents of the Ocean State now qualify for a Canadian passport.

Yes, you read that correctly.

Nearly 15 percent of the population.

THE HERITAGE BOMBSHELL

For generations, the French-Canadian roots of Rhode Island have run bone-deep.

From the old mill towns of Woonsocket to the tight-knit parishes of Central Falls, descendants of Quebecois workers built the very industrial heartland of the state.

But Ottawa’s old rules were brutal.

If your Canadian parent was born abroad, the citizenship line was severed. Cut off. Finished.

Thousands of so-called “Lost Canadians” were left stranded in bureaucratic exile.

LAW CHANGES EVERYTHING

No longer.

Bill C-3 has obliterated the first-generation limit on citizenship by descent.

Now, anyone with a Canadian grandparent—or a parent previously excluded—can claim their status.

It is a gold rush.

Families are already tearing through dusty attics for birth certificates and fragile parish records from Montreal.

THE PRIZE

The payoff is immense.

A Canadian passport unlocks visa-free travel to 185 countries.

It means universal healthcare. The unrestricted right to live in Toronto or Vancouver.

All without surrendering American citizenship.

For Rhode Islanders with Franco-American blood, the northern border has effectively vanished.

The only question left is who will be first in line.


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