Federal order establishing Canadian passport issuing authority and passport administration.
Last evidence check means this project’s automated public-repository check; it is not a government audit, regulator audit, external audit, or assurance engagement.
001immigration-passports-mobilityCanadian citizenship, Canadian passports, Charter mobility rights, immigration status, and the ability to live or work across Canada are currently governed by Canadian federal legal and administrative systems rather than by Alberta alone.002immigration-passports-mobilityAlberta independence would not by itself settle whether Albertans keep Canadian citizenship, Canadian passport eligibility, permanent residence, or Canada-wide live/work rights; those outcomes would depend on Canadian law, Alberta law, and negotiated transition arrangements.003immigration-passports-mobilityThe strongest pro-independence case is that Canada and Alberta would have practical reasons to negotiate continuity for existing citizens, passports, permanent residents, workers, students, families, and cross-border mobility before any transition date.004immigration-passports-mobilityThe strongest anti-independence caution is that current citizenship, passport, immigration, residency, and mobility protections are embedded in Canadian systems and would become uncertain unless counterparties accepted replacement or continuity terms.005immigration-passports-mobilityThis topic remains high-uncertainty because the checked record does not yet contain binding Canada-Alberta citizenship, passport, immigration, residency, or labour-mobility terms for an independence transition.