Since Trump's election, LGBTQ+ Americans are seeking to immigrate to Canada.
download - 2025-02-26T181501.198.jpeg
At a Pride event on Thursday, June 8, 2023, a Pride flag is flown on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Ottawa— Following U.S. President Donald Trump's return to the White House, an LGBTQ+ relief agency reports that the number of Americans seeking to flee the country skyrocketed. Rainbow Railroad's head of protection programs, Swathi Sekhar, reported that the organization got about 1,200 LGBTQ+ American queries on Nov. 6, 2024 alone, compared to just 700 U.S.-based questions prior to that date in 2024. Sekhar stated, "This is actually the most help requests we've received in a single day from any country." That says a lot, then. About half of those individuals who requested help were trans individuals, a mix of both trans men and trans women." Rainbow Railroad says it has received just over 1,800 requests for help from the U.S. so far this year—an 1,100 percent increase over the first two months of 2024. Canadian immigration lawyers are also reporting a rising number of inquiries from American members of the LGBTQ+ community looking to move to Canada. Immigration lawyer Adrienne Smith played a voicemail for The Canadian Press from an American abroad who said they were "extremely terrified" to go back home because of "what Donald Trump wants to do to trans people." She said her small Toronto-based law firm has been "inundated" with inquiries from LGBTQ+ Americans looking to move to Canada since Trump's return. "The overall sentiment that I'm hearing right now is just the kind of terror and speed that they feel like their rights are being stripped. You can hear the fear in people's voices when they're calling," Smith said. Smith said she's received around five to 10 inquiries from LGBTQ+ Americans every day since Trump's inauguration. Trump signed an executive order on the first day of his presidency saying the U.S. government will only recognize biological sexes. Earlier this month, Trump signed another order aimed at barring transgender athletes from competing in girls' and women's sports. Rainbow Railroad helps LGBTQ+ people fleeing persecution in their home countries, but Sekhar said in the vast majority of cases, U.S. citizens don't meet the criteria to legally qualify as a refugee. "They have to show that their government would be absolutely unwilling or unable to protect them in any part of the country. So, they would have to show that they've tried to potentially move from state to state and were not able to find any safety by relocating internally first," Sekhar said. She said that level of persecution is particularly difficult for American citizens to prove, as the U.S. is typically seen as a safe, democratic country. Rainbow Railroad has helped LGBTQ+ people fleeing persecution in other countries relocate to the U.S. U.S. citizens are able to make asylum claims while physically in Canada, and those applications go through the same channels as requests from any other country. "Asylum seekers must prove that they have a real fear of persecution or face serious harm, such as torture or cruel treatment, in their home country or where they usually live," said Renee Proctor, Immigration Minister Marc Miller's press secretary, in a media statement. "They are expected to remain in Canada while they await the adjudication of their claim, and they cannot return to their country of alleged persecution, as doing so will withdraw their claim." Proctor said the Canadian government is watching to see if Trump's orders affect Canadian citizens by, for example, restricting their cross-border travel. Canadian passports can have "X" as a gender identifier, while the U.S. now only recognizes male and female genders. Sekhar said Rainbow Railroad has been directing those looking to flee the U.S. to other services that could help them, such as immigration lawyers. ADVERTISEMENT Smith said that with Canada reducing the number of permanent residents it admits, and given the restrictions imposed by its points-based immigration system, many Americans would have a hard time moving north. "A lot of what the government has targeted in the last year is priority occupations, which basically means people who have work experience in STEM or health care or transportation," Smith said. "Therefore, in my experience, the pathways really depend on what your work experience is in order for people to qualify from outside of Canada." Smith claimed that her staff has been under emotional strain due to the amount and nature of the incoming calls. It's been really, really tough for my front-line employees who receive phone calls and handle initial intake. Since many of us belong to the LGBTQ community, it affects us differently," she remarked. The Canadian Press initially published this news on February 26, 2025. Canadian Press's David Baxter Send in an accessibility feedback correction. Leading Stories After hearing "multiple shots" in the Weston community, one individual was gravely hurt. 8 minutes ago Corporate sponsors provide assistance from Pride Toronto in the face of DEI criticism.
[attachment deleted by admin]