Saturday, March 21, 2026
ADVT 
International

US Applications For New Zealand Citizenship Jump By 70 Percent After Trump's Election

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2017 12:24 PM
    WELLINGTON, New Zealand — It's one thing to talk about changing allegiance to another country when a new president is elected. It's another thing to go ahead and do it.
     
    But that's exactly what seems to be happening, on a small scale, in at least in one distant corner of the world.
     
    In New Zealand, the number of Americans who applied for a grant of citizenship rose to 170 in the 12 weeks following the election of President Donald Trump from 100 in the same period a year earlier, immigration records obtained by The Associated Press show.
     
    In New Zealand, a grant of citizenship is the pathway for people without a family connection. Among those Americans with a New Zealand parent, citizenship applications after the election rose to 203 from 183 a year earlier.
     
    In response to an AP freedom of information request, New Zealand's Department of Internal Affairs said that in the two days after the U.S. election in November, the number of Americans who visited its website to find out about citizenship rose to 4,146 from 305 on the same two weekdays a month earlier.
     
    To be sure, the total number of Americans applying for New Zealand citizenship remains low. The country is more than 10,000 kilometres (6,000 miles) from the mainland U.S. and is perhaps best known for its majestic landscapes. Farming remains central to the economy, with sheep outnumbering the 4.8 million people by about six to one.
     
     
    Some Americans living in New Zealand say their friends and family have been asking them about moving there since the election.
     
    Alanna Irving, 33, a technology startup entrepreneur from San Francisco, moved to New Zealand six years ago and has since married a kiwi, as the locals are known.
     
    "It's an extremely livable place and you can see and palpably feel the difference in how society is organized, and what people prioritize," she said. "New Zealand is a place that cares about equality, I think more. It's less individualistic, more community-minded."
     
    She said a friend of a friend was so disturbed by the outcome of the election that he immediately jumped on a plane and flew to New Zealand to check it out as a possible place to live. Irving said his visit exceeded his expectations.
     
    Most Americans who apply for New Zealand citizenship must first live in the country for five years.
     
    Cameron Pritchard, an immigration consultant at Malcolm Pacific Immigration in Wellington, said the increase in citizenship applications could be a result of people wanting to feel more settled in their adopted country, given the uncertain nature of the world.
     
    He said his company noticed a big spike in inquiries from the U.S. during the election.
     
    "It's been more of a flurry of excitement initially than anything that's translated into a huge avalanche of numbers," he said.
     
     
    By the numbers:
     
    Americans applying for New Zealand citizenship by grant:
     
    Nov. 8, 2016, to Jan. 31, 2017: 170
     
    Nov. 8, 2015, to Jan. 31, 2016: 100
     
    Americans applying for New Zealand citizenship by descent:
     
    Nov. 8, 2016, to Jan. 31, 2017: 203
     
    Nov. 8, 2015, to Jan. 31, 2016: 183
     
    Citizenship-related visits to Department of Internal Affairs website from the U.S.:
     
    Nov. 8 to Nov. 10, 2016: 4,146
     
    Oct. 4 to Oct. 6, 2016: 305
     
    Work-visa arrivals from the U.S.:
     
    January 2017: 254
     
    January 2016: 216
     
    Visitor arrivals from the U.S.:
     
    January 2017: 34,240
     
    January 2016: 28,992
     
    Source: Department of Internal Affairs, Statistics New Zealand

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-origin Woman’s Body Found Hidden In Suitcase In UK, 'Ex-Husband' Suspect

    Indian-origin Woman’s Body Found Hidden In Suitcase In UK, 'Ex-Husband' Suspect
    Leicestershire Police said they had charged Ashwin Daudia, 50, with murder and remanded him in custody. Daudia, of Lyme Road, Leicester, will appear at Leicester Magistrates' Court today, the metro.co.uk reported.

    Indian-origin Woman’s Body Found Hidden In Suitcase In UK, 'Ex-Husband' Suspect

    Children Asked If We Have To Leave US After Donald Trump Won: Indian-American Official Nisha Biswal

    Children Asked If We Have To Leave US After Donald Trump Won: Indian-American Official Nisha Biswal
    Highlighting the post-election fear and anxiety among immigrants, a senior Indian-American official in the Obama Administration has said she experienced it in her own home when the children asked if Donald Trump's win meant they will "have to leave" the country

    Children Asked If We Have To Leave US After Donald Trump Won: Indian-American Official Nisha Biswal

    PICS: 'Britain's Best Boss' Gives Staff Castle Office, Free Beer, In-House Cinema

    PICS: 'Britain's Best Boss'  Gives Staff Castle Office, Free Beer, In-House Cinema
    Chris Morling, founder of Money.co.uk, spent 3 million pounds on renovation of his office with impressive designing by Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen.

    PICS: 'Britain's Best Boss' Gives Staff Castle Office, Free Beer, In-House Cinema

    Nikki Haley Believes United Nation Does More Harm Than Good

    Nikki Haley Believes United Nation Does More Harm Than Good
    Indian-American Nikki Haley, tapped by US President-elect Donald Trump to be UN ambassador, believes that the world body is doing "more harm than good" as she is expected to push for reconsideration of America's whopping funding.

    Nikki Haley Believes United Nation Does More Harm Than Good

    Donald Trump Meets Indian American Ajit Pai

    Donald Trump Meets Indian American Ajit Pai
    US president-elect Donald Trump met Indian-American Ajit Pai, commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission, fuelling speculation about his role in the incoming administration.

    Donald Trump Meets Indian American Ajit Pai

    IMF Chief Christine Lagarde Cites Indian Examples Of Tech Helping Women

    IMF Chief Christine Lagarde Cites Indian Examples Of Tech Helping Women
    Lagarde said we have been talking about closing gender gap for so many years but things have not been moving forward fast enough.

    IMF Chief Christine Lagarde Cites Indian Examples Of Tech Helping Women