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FRENCH CITIZENSHIP

Why might France refuse your citizenship application?

Applying for French citizenship is a stressful and time-consuming process, but could you really be refused for your political views or if you're overheard complaining about France? We sort the fact from the fiction.

Why might France refuse your citizenship application?
A woman celebrates becomes a French citizen at a ceremony attended by French President Emmanuel Macron. (Photo by Michel Euler / POOL / AFP)

It’s not uncommon for people going through the citizenship process to refuse to complain about France ‘in case they hear me’ – but they’re usually joking when they say it.

Recently, however a France-based American influencer shared a video on social media platform TikTok in which she said she could not make any public statement regarding her personal feelings about the situation in Israel and Palestine.

The reason, she said, was not to jeopardise her ongoing application for French citizenship. “I can’t say a peep about it. I cannot risk deportation,” she told her 783,000 followers.

READ ALSO Factcheck: Do foreigners in France really risk deportation for holding pro-Palestine views?

No-one in government or any position of authority in France has said this, so we’re not sure what Rollins is referring to in her video.

Common reasons for refusal

The usual reasons for refusal a citizenship application are simply not fitting the criteria – maybe insufficient time spent living in France (the usual minimum is five years), not having been married for four years if you’re applying through marriage or insufficient financial resources.

You can also be refused on the basis of your language skills – you need to prove you have a reasonable standard of French. 

READ ALSO QUIZ: Could you pass the French citizenship interview?

A criminal record could also stop your application in its tracks – but driving licence points usually won’t count against you.

There’s a lot of paperwork involved in applying for French citizenship and – as anyone who has dealt with the country’s red tape before knows – the wheels of bureaucracy grind slowly. The average time to process a citizenship application is between 18 months and two years, but in some areas it can take longer.

The interview

If you satisfy all the criteria and your dossier is complete, you will then move on to the next step; the interview.

Unlike some countries France doesn’t have a citizenship test where you have to name rivers or identify historical figures.

The test for whether you are ‘integrated’ enough comes in the form of an in-person interview at your local préfecture. You will likely be grilled on French history, geography, politics and culture and you have to prove that you are both knowledgeable about France and you appreciate the country’s values and truly want to become French.

And it’s at the interview stage that the more bizarre reasons for refusal crop up.

Earlier this summer, a 25-year-old Albanian man, who had lived in France since he was 14 and finished school here, said he would appeal after his application for French citizenship was refused because he did not know who Edith Cresson or Jules Ferry were. (They are; France’s first female prime minister in 1991 and the education minister who oversaw the transition to free and secular public schooling in the 1880s). 

It was reported in 2019 that a nurse was denied French citizenship because she had been putting in too many hours at work.

The Val-de-Marne préfecture denied the application for citizenship on the grounds that the woman – whose country of origin was not revealed in reports at the time – was “failing to comply with the law” around working hours.

She apparently had three jobs and clocked up 59 hours of work a week and an average of 271 hours a month, considered “a violation of working regulations in France”.

And, in 2016, an Algerian woman was refused citizenship because she refused to shake hands with the secretary-general of the prefecture and another local official at the ceremony celebrating her successful application for citizenship.

The woman told the Conseil d’Etat, France’s highest administrative court, that her actions were “motivated by her religious convictions”.

We should point out, however, that these types of refusals are unusual – which is why they make the news. 

Getting French citizenship is far from an easy process – in total around 30 percent of applications are turned down, but according to the interior ministry, the majority of these are on financial, eligibility or language grounds.

Exceptional service

One way of getting French citizenship is to provide a ‘service’ to France. Some 12,000 foreign workers whose jobs put them on the front line during the Covid pandemic were given citizenship under a special scheme that fast-tracked their applications.

“Front-line workers responded to the call of the nation, so it is right that the nation takes a step towards them,” said then-Citizenship minister Marlene Schiappa, at the time.

“I welcome our new compatriots to French nationality and thank them in the name of the Republic, while the country also extends its thanks to them.”

And, in 2018, a young Malian immigrant scaled the facade of a building in Paris to save a toddler’s life. He met the president and was made a French citizen for his heroism, and joined the volunteer fire service.

READ ALSO Paris: Who is ‘le spiderman’ – the Malian migrant who saved a toddler’s life?

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FRENCH CITIZENSHIP

Reader question: Can you lose your French citizenship if you commit a crime?

The path to getting French citizenship is long and arduous - but once you've got it, can you lose it again if you are convicted of a crime? What about during the 'two year rule' period?

Reader question: Can you lose your French citizenship if you commit a crime?

One of the things you need to do when applying for citizenship is prove that you have not been convicted of a crime by providing your extrait de casier judiciaire (criminal records check).

Depending on your criteria for citizenship, you may need to demonstrate a clean record going back 10 years – both in France and in any other countries you have lived in during that period.

Getting your French casier judiciaire is fairly straightforward – you can apply online, the document is sent by email within a few days and the service is free. Other countries have different systems which may be more complicated, time-consuming and expensive.

Citizenship is highly likely to be refused to anyone who has:

  • Conviction(s) for acts against the fundamental interests of the nation, or conviction for serious and / or violent offences;
  • Conviction(s) for crimes against the public administration (crimes committed by persons holding a public office);
  • Conviction(s) for acts of insubordination in relation to performance of national service;
  • Engaged for the benefit of a foreign state, in acts incompatible with the quality of French national and commission of acts that are prejudicial to the interests of France.

Decisions are made on a case-by-case basis but it’s unlikely that citizenship would be refused due to a previous conviction for less serious crimes including driving offences.

READ ALSO French citizenship: How long does it take for your application to be dealt with?

But what about once you have your French citizenship?

Now we know readers of The Local are fine, upstanding, law-abiding citizens but let’s say that you do find yourself in front of a French court after becoming French.

Well, chances are you’re not about to lose citizenship for most types of criminal convictions.

But not all. There are several circumstances in which people may be stripped of French nationality. 

  • If you are convicted of a crime or an offence constituting undermining the fundamental interests of France;
  • If you are convicted of a crime or an offence constituting an act of terrorism;
  • If, while in public office, you are convicted of a crime or an offence constituting interference with public administration. For example, infringement of individual freedom, discrimination;
  • If you have not complied with the obligations arising from national service;
  • If you have acted for the benefit of a foreign state, incompatible with being French.

It is also possible for a person’s nationality revoked if the following two conditions are applicable:

  • If you are are active in a foreign army, public service or international organisation of which France is not a member, and;
  • You refuse to stop this activity despite a government order.

Being convicted of an ‘ordinary’ crime such as burglary or assault – or driving offences – would not result in your losing citizenship.

Does it matter when you became French?

You might have heard talk of the ‘two-year rule’ – this concept is often misunderstood, but in fact just means that your French citizenship can be annulled if you are found to have lied on the application or if the official in your case has made a mistake and you are not eligible for French nationality. In both cases, this can only happen within two years of your being granted citizenship.

Find a full explanation of the two-year rule HERE.

Once the two years have passed your citizenship cannot be annulled, but you can be stripped of citizenship in the circumstances described above.

There is a timeline of sorts here though.

Citizenship can only be stripped if the crime as outlined above was committed either before acquiring French nationality or within 10 years of acquiring French nationality.

This timeline is extended to 15 years in the event of an attack on the fundamental interests of the Nation or an act of terrorism.

Crucially, no person can be left stateless under French law – this means that only those who have dual nationality can be stripped of French citizenship. Therefore people whose home country does not allow dual nationality and who gave up their original nationality to become French cannot lose their French citizenship.

Anyone who is French by birth cannot lose their French nationality.

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