Yanks flee down under to avoid Trump

New Zealand has seen a surge in Americans interested in becoming Kiwis, ever since the election of Donald Trump as president.

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 US election in November, the number of Americans who visited its website to find out about citizenship rose to 4146 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 from the mainland US 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.

Most Americans who apply for New Zealand citizenship must first live in the country for five years.


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Source: AAP


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