Introduction
In recent decades, Canada, the US, and the industrialized democracies of Europe have all experienced a remarkable rise in migrant settlement. This substantial expansion of immigrant populations across the Western world has sparked much interest among scholars and policy makers in the forces that encourage or impede the political incorporation of newcomers. Much of this research focuses on conditions and opportunities within a particular settlement country. The extent to which native-born citizens discriminate against or accept immigrants (for example, Bilodeau et al., Reference Bilodeau, White, Ma, Turgeon and Henderson2023; Fischer-Neumann, Reference Fischer-Neumann2014; Oskooii, Reference Oskooii2016; Paquet and Lawlor, Reference Paquet and Lawlor2022); outreach on the part of local civic organizations and political parties (for example, Dancygier et al., Reference Dancygier, Lindgren, Oskarsson and Vernby2015; McCann and Nishikawa Chávez, Reference McCann and Chávez2016; Wong, Reference Wong2006); the accessibility of public services in education, healthcare, and housing (for example, Freeman, Reference Freeman2004; Givens, Reference Givens2007); policies concerning naturalization and the acquisition of full citizenship rights (for example, Just and Anderson, Reference Just and Anderson2012)—all of these factors, among others, have been found to have substantial effects on immigrant acculturation and involvement in a new democratic system.
In this note, we pursue a line of inquiry that has received considerably less scrutiny in the scholarly literature on immigrant incorporation: how immigrants’ attentiveness to politics in the country of origin shapes attitudes and aspirations regarding elections and parties in the settlement country. Does such attentiveness undercut immigrant political incorporation in the country of residence, which would suggest a “zero-sum” relationship between political engagement in a national versus transnational context? Or can attention to politics from the distance as an emigrant spur greater engagement in the adoptive country as an immigrant?
Theoretical Background and Hypotheses
Over one hundred nations or territories now allow expatriates to participate in elections via absentee ballot (Lafleur, Reference Lafleur2013; Umpierrez de Reguero et al., Reference Umpierrez de Reguero, Finn and Peltoniemi2023; McCann et al., Reference McCann, Escobar and Arana2019; Wellman et al., Reference Wellman, Allen and Nyblade2023). This expansion of voting rights ensures that a great many migrants will be drawn in some fashion into native-country politics when elections take place there, casting absentee ballots or donating to political parties, talking about politics with friends and relatives from the native country, or simply paying close attention to the contest from the distance (Burgess and Tyburski, Reference Burgess and Tyburski2020; Paarlberg, Reference Paarlberg2020).
Focusing on this latter form of engagement, what are the implications of attention to native-country politics for immigrant incorporation in the country of residence? One plausible scenario is that when immigrants turn their attention towards elections in their native country, they become less open to taking part in the country where they have settled. Following from Tsuda (Reference Tsuda2012), we label this a “zero-sum” model of bi-nationalism (see also Black, Reference Black2011: 1171; Black, Reference Black1987; Peltoniemi Reference Peltoniemi2018). The key theoretical premise of this model is that in an immigrant's country of origin, campaigns and elections would likely tend to focus on topics that are salient for voters within that country, such as the job performance of incumbent leaders or the attractiveness of specific national policies and ideological positions. These considerations may have little bearing on political debates, ideologies and agendas in the settlement country (Zechmeister, Reference Zechmeister2006). It is a truism that involvement, including simply paying attention to politics, can be costly for individuals. Many people may turn away from politics because they lack the wherewithal to keep track of public affairs and take part (Verba et al., Reference Verba, Schlozman and Brady1995). For immigrants, the prospect of following politics in two distinctive national contexts could be daunting; an immigrant whose attention is directed towards campaigns and elections in the country of birth may naturally pull back from politics in the residential country due to these limitations.
It is possible, however, to imagine a contrasting dynamic, where remote attentiveness to country-of-origin elections promotes deeper engagement in the settlement country (Levitt, Reference Levitt, Foner, Rumbaut and Gold2000: 460; Tsuda, Reference Tsuda2012: 635).Footnote 1 Various mechanisms could account for this. Attention to elections as a transnational citizen may reinforce a general sense of social obligation and civic duty or bolster beliefs about personal efficacy in politics (see, for example, Mansbridge, Reference Mansbridge, Elkin and Soltan1999; Superti, Reference Superti2023). These effects could in turn lead to higher levels of enthusiasm to take part in politics where one has settled. At the very least, this hypothesis posits that there is no inherent tension between democratic incorporation as both an immigrant and emigrant (cf. Finn, Reference Finn2020).
We explore these contrasting possibilities by focusing on a sizable immigrant population in a Western democracy that has received scant scholarly attention: Americans living in Canada. The United States has long considered itself a nation of immigrants, but it is also a nation of emigration. In a 2018 report, the Federal Voting Assistance Program estimated that nearly five million voting-age Americans live abroad. Canada is the leading destination country for American emigrants, with some 860,000 US citizens having relocated north of the border (FVAP, 2020). Within this population, the FVAP indicates that 516,309 were eligible to vote in the US—a far higher number than in any other country, and more than half again as many as in the UK, which has the second-largest number of American emigrants.
This focus on the American-born population in Canada is theoretically advantageous for several reasons. Most residents of Canada live close to the US-Canada border, and American elections receive extensive coverage in English-language Canadian media outlets (Matthews and Satzewich, Reference Matthews, Satzewich, Satzewich and Wong2006). In any US election cycle, there would be ample opportunities for Americans living north of the border to take part in a campaign. It would do little good to examine whether directing attention to elections in the country of origin undercuts or promotes involvement in the residential country for an immigrant group that would not have much potential to become informed about politics in the country of origin.Footnote 2
Another advantage of focusing the analysis on Americans in Canada is that the relationship between political attentiveness in the US context and engagement in the Canadian context—be it “zero-sum” or positively reinforcing—may be more readily gauged. The United States and Canada are similar in many respects, sometimes described by researchers and observers as “two peas in a pod” (Bloemraad, Reference Bloemraad2011). Both are first-world industrialized democracies where English is spoken most. Few Americans in Canada would be considered economic migrants who live on the margins of society. Rather, Americans who are most open to settling in Canada tend to have personal finances that are somewhat better than average (Marrow and Klekowski von Koppenfels, Reference Marrow and von Koppenfels2020). If attention to politics in the native country is compatible with or even boosts political incorporation in the settlement country, this effect should be most noticeable for an immigrant population that is not otherwise excluded from civic life because of social or economic marginalization, as many “South to North migrants” are.
The limited prior research on the American immigrant population in Canada suggests that migrants’ attention to native-country politics does not undercut political incorporation in the Canadian context. The participants in Croucher's (Reference Croucher2011) study were said to be “perfectly at ease with and fully entitled to possess and practice citizenship in a country where they did not reside … and to practice simultaneous membership” in two nation-states (126; see also Dashefsky and Woodrow-Lafield, Reference Dashefsky and Woodrow-Lafield1992 and Matthews and Satzewich, Reference Matthews, Satzewich, Satzewich and Wong2006). Yet while everyday life in Canada is in many respects similar to life in the United States, there is no denying that the two countries differ markedly in their party organizations, governing agendas, federal structure, and formal institutions of representation (Bilodeau et al., Reference Bilodeau, White and Nevitte2010). Such differences lend credence to the “zero-sum” view of bi-nationalism. Americans in Canada whose attention is drawn into US elections may well grow less enthusiastic about taking part in Canadian politics because of the distinctive features of each political system and the challenges of engagement in the two domains.
When probing such dynamics, we will be mindful of subgroup variations. Whether or not remote attention to US politics is compatible with political incorporation in the Canadian context, the effects of transnationalism could be most evident for Americans who have not yet put down deep roots in Canada. All immigrants lead lives that to an extent fall “in between” two countries (cf. Jones-Correa, Reference Jones-Correa1998). This would be especially true for those who do not yet identify as a member of the country of residence, continue to identify as still part of the country of origin, or have lived a relatively short while in the new country. For such immigrants, the trade-off between attention to native-country politics and political engagement in the country of residence may be most apparent (Tsuda, Reference Tsuda2012).
As immigrants become more established in the residential country and grow to see themselves as bona fide members of it, their level of political engagement in that country might tend to depend more on domestic mobilizing factors, such as patterns of outreach from political parties and interest groups and less on levels of transnational connections. In the analysis below, we also investigate the potential moderating influence of education level. If attentiveness to politics in the country of origin undercuts a willingness to become involved in the residential country because of the cognitive costs of involvement in two separate political systems, this tension could be more readily apparent for less educated migrants.
Research Design and Findings
The analysis draws from an original web survey of Americans over eighteen living in Canada (N = 686). Respondents were sampled via large opt-in panels from two different sources, Qualtrics and Asking Canadians. Each firm creates large-N panels from loyalty program websites that attract a diverse set of Canadians. In both cases, the panel from which our samples are drawn was tailored to ensure that it is representative of census data as reported by the official Statistics Canada agency. Background information in both panels included place of birth, which allowed us to target American-born respondents, including Americans who were not Canadian citizens.Footnote 3 It is worth noting with respect to the representativeness of this sample that it is similar to the 464 American-born respondents in the 2019 Canadian Election Study, a large nationally representative survey that included both Canadian citizens and non-citizens (Stephenson et al., Reference Stephenson, Harell, Rubenson and Loewen2000; see the online appendix).
This survey was conducted in August of 2020, near the time of the Democratic and Republican national conventions. A few minutes into the survey, a randomized experimental treatment was applied. Approximately half of the respondents (N = 356) were exposed to vivid images of the two major party presidential nominees, Donald Trump and Joe Biden, rallying supporters (see Figure 1).Footnote 4 These respondents then reported their impressions of the pictures, whether the images prompted feelings of anger, hopefulness, fear and/or pride.Footnote 5 Respondents assigned to the control group were not exposed to US campaign images or prompted to report any personal reactions to the presidential candidates.
The goal of showing randomly selected study participants colourful imagery of political rallies in the United States was to concentrate the attention of emigrants on the presidential contest south of the border and reinforce their standing as potential participants. Relatively few rallies were held during the 2020 American elections due to COVID restrictions, which would likely have made these images particularly striking. The subsequent items on reactions to the pictures provided a rationale for exposing respondents to such images and served as a manipulation check to confirm that subjects had indeed paid attention and were personally moved in some way. Over 90 per cent of the members of the treatment group reported having an affective reaction, a very high level of responsiveness demonstrating that, at that moment, American electoral politics was indeed a salient focus of attention. This experimental treatment is admittedly exploratory. No previous research has sought to direct migrants’ attention towards elections in their country of origin to observe downstream effects on orientations towards country-of-residence politics.Footnote 6
What are the implications of such mobilization on engagement in Canadian politics? We focus on two outcome measures: level of willingness to take part in Canadian elections when given the chance and level of identification with one of the Canadian political parties.
Interest in Participating in Canadian Elections
Table 1 presents findings from five OLS regression models. The dependent variable in each case is a four-point item on general willingness to turn out for a hypothetical Canadian election, which was asked after the treatment. This item was worded so that all respondents, including those who were not registered to vote in Canada, could report their general attitude towards taking part: “If elections were being held in Canada and you were eligible to vote, how likely is it that you would participate—very likely [4], somewhat likely [3], not too likely [2], or very unlikely [1]?”Footnote 7
Note: ‘*’ = p < .10; ‘**’ = p < .05; ‘***’ = p < .01. Coefficients estimated through ordinary least squares regression. The dependent variable is a four-point scale ranging from “very unlikely to vote” (1) to “very likely to vote” (4). Results from ordered logistic regression models are substantively identical to these. N = 686.
Predictors in the first model include the treatment indicator plus a four-point scale measuring the degree of identification as a “Canadian” (4 = very strongly, 1 = not strongly at all), a similar measure asking about identification as an “American,” the number of years the respondent had lived in Canada (5 years or fewer, 6 to 10 years, 11 to 20 years, or more than 20 years), and level of formal education (high school or less, some college or trade school, college degree, or post-graduate studies). The subsequent models in this table include multiplicative interaction terms to assess potential subsample variations in treatment effects.Footnote 8
As shown in the first specification, exposure to images of American campaign rallies had only a very slight and statistically insignificant demobilizing effect on willingness to vote in Canadian elections.Footnote 9 However, the second model suggests that the experimental treatment had a greater effect on Americans who do not see themselves as fully Canadian.Footnote 10 The negative sign of the interactive effect of exposure to the treatment and level of Canadian identification imply that American migrants who were exposed to scenes of US campaign rallies and did not identify as “Canadian” were significantly demobilized in the Canadian context. This offers support to the zero-sum hypothesis for this subpopulation and is in keeping with Tsuda's (Reference Tsuda2012: 635) conjecture that the “less integrated immigrants are in the host society,” the more such zero-sum relationships would likely surface.
The chart in Figure 2 clarifies this effect. Among Americans who did not identify as Canadian, the treatment reduced enthusiasm by approximately one-third of a point, a pronounced and significant effect. The impact of the treatment diminishes to insignificance for respondents who strongly or very strongly identified as Canadian.
Turning to the third regression model in Table 1, the negative sign for the “treatment X American identification” interaction term implies that migrants who identified more strongly as Americans tended to lose interest in Canadian electoral politics following exposure to the treatment, an effect that complements the findings in the second model. This coefficient, however, does not rise to the level of statistical significance (p = .31). The fourth model provides further evidence for the zero-sum view of transnationalism for less incorporated immigrants. Here we find that exposure to US campaign rally images primarily affected Americans without deep roots in Canada. Figure 3 shows these distinctive effects. For Americans who had resided in Canada for less than five years, the negative impact of the treatment is approximately as strong as that for respondents who did not identify as “Canadian.” With respect to education level (fifth model in Table 1), we find no evidence of such moderating effects.
Effect on Canadian Partisanship
Does this conditional “zero-sum” finding carry over from voting intention to party identification in the Canadian context? After the treatment was administered, all respondents indicated whether they identified strongly with a Canadian political party (coded 4), identified weakly (3), leaned towards a Canadian party (2), or did not identify at all with one of the parties (1). Table 2 presents findings from five regression models that are comparable to those in Table 1. As was the case with the item on turning out to vote in a Canadian election, there is only a very modest negative relationship between exposure to American campaign images and the level of Canadian partisanship.Footnote 11
Note: ‘*’ = p < .10; ‘**’ = p < .05; ‘***’ = p < .01. Coefficients estimated through ordinary least squares regression. The dependent variable is a four-point scale ranging from “do not identify with a Canadian party” (1) to “strongly identify with a Canadian party” (4). Results from ordered logistic regression models are substantively identical to these. N = 686.
The second specification in this table indicates, however, that the degree of identification as a “Canadian” interacted with the treatment; Americans who did not see themselves as Canadian were somewhat more responsive (p < .10 for the interaction term). Figure 4 shows this effect. Less incorporated Americans who were reminded of the US campaigns saw a drop in Canadian partisanship (−.37) that essentially matches the drop in interest in taking part in Canadian elections. The other potential moderating variables (strength of identification as an American, time spent in Canada, and education level) do not, however, have similarly significant effects on the treatment.
Conclusion
Individuals who leave their native country to reside in another live their lives to an extent between the two nations (Jones-Correa, Reference Jones-Correa1998). When major national elections are taking place in one's country of origin, many emigrants are likely to be drawn into the process either formally, by voting and giving material support to a campaign, or informally, by encouraging friends and family “back home” to vote a certain way or simply becoming intellectually engaged from a distance.
Relatively little is known about the implications of emigrant attentiveness to home-country politics for immigrant incorporation in the settlement country. To our knowledge, this is the first study to use experimental methods to trace the impact of transnational attentiveness on willingness to take part in settlement-country elections and identify as a partisan in that context. As with all experiments, there is a degree of artificiality in this analytical framework. The experimental treatment was meant to remind American emigrants in Canada of the lively and contentious campaigns taking place south of the border and reinforce their standing as participants. We could not, of course, randomly assign respondents to participate in the US election in a more formal way. Nevertheless, the evidence we uncover is suggestive, albeit exploratory and worthy of further investigation. For respondents who do not identify as Canadian or who have lived in the country for a relatively brief period, exposure to images of the Trump and Biden campaign rallies followed by reflections on one's personal feelings about the events led to a significant decline in enthusiasm to take part in Canadian politics. This effect may stem from wariness about the challenge of focusing attention on US politics while simultaneously engaging in the civic life of another country that is not yet familiar or approachable. The limited prior research on American immigrants in Canada suggested that attention to US politics was compatible with integration into Canadian democracy. Indeed, Americans in Canada were said to feel entitled to take part in both domains (Croucher, Reference Croucher2011). Our findings put a finer point on this characterization.
To expand on these findings, future research should investigate more closely the mechanisms behind the experimental effects and how more overt and sustained transnational mobilization by campaigns, parties, and groups may affect the trajectory of immigrant incorporation. In addition to the theoretical mechanism posited above—American emigrants who engage in some fashion in US politics might pull away from Canadian politics because of implicit “cost constraints”—the feelings that respondents in the treatment group noted after seeing the campaign images point to another possible mechanism. Negative reactions to the rallying pictures were somewhat more common than positive ones. This tendency raises the possibility that the outcome of transnational political engagement for an emigrant could affect political attitudes and aspirations in the residential-country context. That is, political bi-nationality may not be strictly a zero-sum or mutually reinforcing proposition. Emigrants who find their attentiveness to home-country politics to be satisfying may in turn grow more enthusiastic about political engagement in the settlement country. But if transnational engagement in whatever form is unsatisfying, then the prospect of taking part in politics in the residential country could become less attractive. Within our dataset, there is some evidence to suggest that pulling away from Canadian politics stemmed in part from having a more negative reaction to the rally pictures.Footnote 12 Future work should investigate more systematically how the outcomes from particular transnational political activities, rather than transnational attentiveness among emigrants per se, affect involvement as an immigrant.
Finally, we should underscore the need for further comparative analysis. By focusing on the American immigrant population in Canada, we control for various factors that could make it difficult to assess how attention to campaigns in the country of origin might affect political incorporation in the settlement country. At the same time, we recognize that this is a rather select group of immigrants. Future work should examine whether the findings presented here can be generalized to cover other cases of transnational campaign exposure, where the more numerous populations of “South to North” migrants direct their attention to native-country politics. Many of these migrants might be classified as economic migrants or refugees who grudgingly emigrated to a developed democracy under duress or persecution. These migrants may never identify with the settlement country to the degree that US-born residents of Canada grow to see themselves as “Canadian.” It is, therefore, possible that for migrants who settled not so much by choice but by necessity, the effect of transnational political engagement on attitudes towards politics in the residential country would be comparatively more influential.
Acknowledgements
We thank Walt Stone, Lonna Atkeson, Adrian Singleton, Clay Clemens, Mark Mullen, Larry LeDuc, Jon Pammett, Richard Johnston, Amanda Klekowski von Koppenfels, Michael Jones-Correa, Elizabeth Iams Wellman, Nikola Mirilovic, Victoria Finn, Chris Alcantara, Janique Dubois, and the anonymous CJPS reviewers for helpful feedback. Much of the analysis was conducted while the first author was in residence in the Department of Political Science at Carleton University as the Fulbright Canada Research Chair in North American Politics. An earlier version of this research note was presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association in Seattle, WA, September 30–October 3, 2021.
Competing interests
The authors declare none.
Supplementary Material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S000842392300080X.