Toronto:After Joe Biden's disastrous TV debate with Donald Trump, when the president's reelection prospects began unravelling, Vancouver immigration lawyer Randall Cohn started getting calls from Americans.
It was the first "panic period" among people anxious about another Trump administration and interested in moving to Canada. "The surge reduced a little bit after (Kamala) Harris became the nominee, and then I got another surge in the last couple of weeks," Cohn told AFP.
Following Trump's November 5 victory, Google Trends reported a more than 1,000 percent increase in US-based searches on moving to Canada. After his 2016 win, elevated traffic crashed Canada's immigration website.
The phenomenon of left-leaning Americans becoming "Canada-curious" after a Republican election victory predates Trump. There were similar media reports when Ronald Reagan beat Jimmy Carter in 1980. Experts note the number of Americans who have actually uprooted and moved to Canada because of an election result is hard to quantify but is understood to be low.
Immigrating to Canada is difficult, and by some measures, harder now than ever. "Somebody with no pre-existing connection to Canada is going to have a really, really difficult time," Jacqueline Bonisteel, a partner at the Corporate Immigration Law Firm, told AFP.
Can't buy residency
Cohn said he has gotten calls from "fairly wealthy" people distraught by Trump's comeback who feel "entitled to be mobile." "They want to basically buy the thing from the menu that will get them permanent residence in Canada," he said. "I effectively have to say it's not as easy as you think it is and there's no way to buy residency."
Shanthony Exum, a former Brooklyn resident who moved to Montreal during the pandemic before the 2020 election, described immigration as "daunting...exhausting (and) expensive." The 42-year-old artist offered caution to Americans eyeing Canada for political reasons.
"Trump's policies are terrifying to me but that wasn't the reason I moved," she said. Exum had a long-standing fondness for Montreal and was visiting the city as New York City's Covid dead were being stored in refrigerated trucks. Then her Brooklyn landlord sold the property where she lived, so she decided to try staying in Canada.