Most Americans who vow to leave over an election never do. Will this year be different?
Deirdre Roney wanted an escape plan 鈥 a place to go if her darkest fears about America鈥檚 democracy came to pass.
The Los Angeles attorney and activist for immigrant and voting rights has worried about a rise of authoritarianism ever since Donald Trump won the presidency in 2016. As this fall鈥檚 election drew closer, that anxiety only grew.
Trump has vowed 鈥谤别迟谤颈产耻迟颈辞苍鈥 if he wins and a 鈥bloodbath鈥 if he loses. Though she says she鈥檚 not a high-profile activist, Roney fears political persecution could become a reality. 鈥淚 would challenge you to find somebody who's as depressed and dark and scared as I am,鈥 she said.
So, this summer, she secured her escape hatch. She and her husband obtained dual citizenship in the Caribbean nation of Antigua and Barbuda in exchange for a development fund investment of about $100,000, she said 鈥 a barrier-free overseas refuge to use if she feels unsafe.
鈥淚 wanted us to have a place to go,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wanted a Plan B.鈥
The idea of moving to another country to protest a presidential administration or political policy isn鈥檛 new 鈥 think the Vietnam War or even vows to move following the reelection of President George W. Bush. Even Trump once joked he might leave if Joe Biden was elected.听
Typically, relatively few who vow to leave actually make the move, said Amanda Klekowski von Koppenfels, a University of Kent migration scholar and expert on Americans abroad.
But this year, as hits the red zone ahead of a divisive election contest between Trump and Biden, there are signs that Americans from a cross-section of society are taking a more serious look at the exits.
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The percentage of 91影视 citizens who would settle abroad if they were able reached 34% in a 26 poll by Monmouth University, up from 12% since 1995. Monmouth polling officials said they believe the political rancor of recent years likely helped fuel the rise.
For some current and former members of the 91影视 law enforcement and intelligence community, threats to jail political opponents are driving them to weigh whether they may have to leave to avoid being illegally detained, according to a former FBI director.
A recent survey by the publisher International Living found that 65% of more than 2,700 readers said that concerns about the political climate prompted them to accelerate plans to relocate overseas.
Henley & Partners, a large global residence and citizenship advisory firm, this year that wealthy Americans are pursuing backup citizenship or residence abroad at record levels. Motivations for its clients include political risk along with tax or business reasons.
Several other firms that help Americans live or work abroad told 91影视 that political uncertainty is driving a spike not just in inquiries and but in concrete efforts to secure visas, homes, dual citizenship or foreign work permits 鈥 whether to move or to set up a contingency plan.听
David Lesperance, a Canadian tax and immigration adviser whose firm helps people secure dual citizenships or residency abroad, said most of his 91影视 clients now cite concerns including political polarization and deadlock, antisemitism, gun violence, threats to LGBTQ+ rights, fear of rule by 鈥渢he other party鈥 and retribution by a Trump administration.听
And for some, such moves are also easier in the era of remote work.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 different today is people are acting on it,鈥 Lesperance said, adding that the Supreme Court ruling relating to presidential immunity has further ratcheted up concerns. 鈥淭hey sense the danger is real.鈥
Whether significant numbers of Americans actually pull up stakes is far from certain. Moving abroad brings the challenges of obtaining a visa and leaving behind family obligations. And some view such sentiments as an overreaction at home when other countries also face new political turmoil.
But it鈥檚 an idea that is a growing topic of conversation, especially after a presidential debate that raised new questions about Biden鈥檚 suitability and Trump鈥檚 repeated falsehoods. Even before that, some said, the urge to escape has spurred calls for advice to friends living overseas.
Justin Knepper, 48, moved from California to Portugal in 2020. Now, he said, 鈥淚 would say at least 50% of our friends are considering moving鈥 with politics at least a factor for most.
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Moving to South Africa: 鈥榃e鈥檝e got to get out of here鈥櫶
Ted Baumann鈥檚 move last year came after he grew alienated from both political parties.
The 63-year-old worked in nonprofit housing and financial publishing while living in Decatur, Georgia, near Atlanta, with his wife, a prekindergarten teacher, and their daughter.
He watched with concern as reactionary politics gathered steam amid President Barack Obama鈥檚 tenure.听He was stunned when Senate Republicans violated a norm by blocking Obama from filling a Supreme Court seat. He said it seemed like 鈥淭hird-World style politics.鈥
He worried about how easily some could rationalize such moves. Then Trump won. All around him, he thought political debate had become increasingly vitriolic.听
鈥淚 remember waking up the next week and thinking, 鈥榃e鈥檝e got to get out of here,鈥欌 he said.
It wouldn鈥檛 be a difficult move. Baumann鈥檚 wife is originally from South Africa. And he鈥檇 previously lived for a time and already had dual citizenship.
But they were settled into their own Georgia community. They both had good jobs and their daughter was headed to high school. And then the pandemic hit.听
While voters had narrowly elected Biden in 2020, it rattled him that nearly half of America supported Trump鈥檚 ideas including stolen-election conspiracies that fueled the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the 91影视 Capitol.
But Baumann 鈥 who said he doesn鈥檛 identify with either party but leans left 鈥 wasn鈥檛 thrilled with Democrats either.听听听
He thought liberals were overly focused on 鈥渋dentity politics, gender, race and sexual orientation 鈥 which are all important,鈥 he said, and gave too little attention to pressing economic and other issues.
Over time, he lost faith that elected bodies could tackle everyday issues.
鈥淚t doesn't really matter which side you're from. It鈥檚 the inability to govern and to legislate and to address issues,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ecause eventually, these unsolved issues are going to come back to bite you. You're going to run out of Social Security, you're going run out of health care for the elderly.鈥
By 2022, he and his wife decided, 鈥淭his is not where we want to raise our daughter, this is not where we want to be,鈥 he said, putting plans in motion to move to South Africa.听
There were economic considerations involved in their move, too: The cost of living, as well as health care, would be lower. Last year, they left behind their life in the Atlanta area for Cape Town. His daughter entered high school there and 鈥渃ouldn鈥檛 be happier,鈥 he said. Baumann now works remotely.
To be sure, South Africa has its share of political struggles and problems, he said. But it felt like a place moving in a positive direction. America, by contrast, seemed to be moving backward.
Moving to Spain: Complicated reasons for going abroad听
Marsha Scarbrough arrived in Spain in early 2017.
Not long before that, she had given an interview to a Spanish reporter back home in the 91影视 and found herself on the front page of a Spanish newspaper 鈥 dubbed 鈥淟a Primera Exiliada,鈥 the first exile, following Trump鈥檚 election.
Though she opposed Trump, moved at age 70 for a mix of reasons including affordable retirement, less expensive health care and a desire to live abroad, she said. She also wanted to be away from gun violence and other problems in the 91影视, she said.
That鈥檚 true for most 91影视 residents who migrate overseas for multiple reasons such as jobs, spouses or to study, said Klekowski von Koppenfels, the University of Kent expert. But she said politics can play into it.听
鈥淏ack when George Bush's handling of the Iraq War was a big political issue in the United States, I spoke with a number of people who had always meant to move to Europe and had always thought of studying in Europe. And then, as the Iraq War rolled around, they were increasingly unhappy with the politics around that. They thought, OK, now's the time for me to go ahead and move,鈥欌 she said.
A similar dynamic is in play for some currently considering a move.
Marco Permunian, founder of Italian Citizenship Assistance, has seen inquiries triple this year reaching as many as 250 a day, most 91影视 residents looking to relocate, get dual citizenship based on lineage, or obtain visas to work, study, or retire in Italy or elsewhere in Europe.
He said a 鈥済eneral feeling of instability throughout the country, both politically and socially鈥 is what鈥檚 driving many of his clients to seek to move to Europe now.听A minority of them are ready to go immediately, he said, while others 鈥渨ant to have the option to relocate if they have to.鈥
In 91影视, Adrian Leeds, whose company helps Americans find real estate, said her business has doubled each year since the pandemic. While some Americans are worried about far-right gains in 91影视, she said that pales to clients citing the 鈥渇ear of Donald Trump and the disaster in the 91影视 when it comes to health care, gun control, women's rights, etc.,鈥 she said.听
Jennifer Stevens, editor at the move-abroad publication International Living, which conducted the survey showing rising political concerns among readers, has seen it too.听
鈥淧eople who already had an idea in the back of their minds that they might like to go abroad sometime,鈥 she said, 鈥淭hey're crafting a Plan B because they feel like they just might need it if things go sideways in November and beyond.鈥
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But will they adopt Plan B? Klekowski von Koppenfels said a survey she helped to commission didn鈥檛 show a significant increase in emigration aspirations between 2014 and 2019 despite an increase in public statements about it.
Gallup found that during the start of the Trump Administration in 2017 and 2018, a to another country if they could. That was higher than the average levels during the Bush (11%) or Obama administration (10%).听
Gallup said that while it didn鈥檛 ask respondents about political leanings, the surge in Americans' desire to migrate in those years came among groups that typically leaned Democratic and had disapproved of Trump: 听
The percentage of respondents in later Gallup polls who said they'd like to move abroad permanently dipped to 13% in 2020 and rose to 17% in 2023, according to data provided by Gallup.
In March, the Monmouth poll found that of the 34% who said they would settle in another country if free to do so. It asked about the political leanings of those who said they would leave: 41% of independents, 35% of Democrats and 22% of Republicans.
If wanting or vowing to leave is most often a political statement, it鈥檚 also a source of political fodder.
When Barbara Streisand said she would leave the country if Trump won, the conservative outlet declared that 鈥淔or the second time in recent history, the trash is promising to take itself out.鈥 In 2020, one Ohio sheriff mocked celebrities who said they鈥檇 leave four years ago but didn't by .听
And some who want to leave get criticism for leaving the 91影视 instead of 91影视 for change.听
After Scarborough moved to Spain, a man from another European country told her, 鈥 鈥榃ell, you're just an opportunist. You鈥檙e taking advantage of other countries where people have done the work.鈥 But she鈥檇 spent years advocating for causes back home, she said.听
鈥淚'm choosing to spend my final years having fun in a place that has solved many of these problems and created a better quality of life,鈥 she said. 鈥淎t my age, I鈥檝e done everything I can do. Do I need to keep 91影视?鈥
Moving to Europe: Surprising, similar political issues听
91影视 Ell, 36, said people often underestimate the costs and challenges of moving.听
Ell, a Trump-supporting Republican Southern California native who moved to Sweden in 2016 to be with her partner, founded an online group called Nordic Republicans to connect conservatives, who she said are difficult to find in an area where Democrats tend to dominate expat forums.
鈥淲hen I hear people say, 鈥業'm gonna move out of the country, because of the politics there.鈥 I think it's a bit silly because it's really difficult if you just want to get up and move,鈥 she said.
Some countries have strict residency policies for immigrants. Obtaining visas, work permits and citizenship often takes time and is costly.听
鈥淎nd then there鈥檚 the politics,鈥 Ell said, noting that Sweden, despite its liberal reputation, didn鈥檛 close businesses or mandate certain health measures during the COVID-19 pandemic, in contrast to 91影视 policies she opposed. 鈥淭hey might be surprised that there's actually similar right-leaning politics in many European countries.鈥
Indeed, support for right-leaning politicians has been rising in some European countries. In 91影视, a far-right party made historic gains in the first round of hastily called legislative elections, raising the specter of the far-right coming into power for the first time since Nazi occupation in World War II. In the final round of voting, the far-right听National Rally party fell short of expectations, finishing behind centrist and leftist coalitions, but still secured its highest number of legislative seats yet. In early July, the Netherlands installed a new right-wing government, .听
Alessandra Bloom, 33, who moved from Boston where she worked in restaurant management to Rovigo, Italy, in 2021 to seek dual citizenship based on lineage, now works for Italian Citizenship Assistance 鈥 and understands why some Americans back home are looking abroad.
鈥淚t feels heavy in America. The divide is so strong,鈥 she said. But living in Italy has also shown her that 鈥渢here are problems everywhere in the world, and no matter where you go, everyone has political troubles.鈥 She added, 鈥淚 mean, they have just as much conservative politics and immigrant policy that they're debating.鈥
David Morse, 72,听 who once worked as a staffer to Congressional Republicans, said he left the 91影视 because of Trump. He moved in 2019 to Norway, where his wife was born. But he鈥檚 found it harder than he'd hoped to leave Trump鈥檚 political noise behind: 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to avoid Donald Trump.鈥
On TV,听 he said, is a regular TV show chronicling Trump news. He鈥檚 everywhere on the internet.听And Morse still reads 91影视 political news often.
鈥淎nd I guess that's partly my fault, too, because I suppose I could just not read stuff and turn it off, but I don鈥檛,鈥 he said. Trump, he said, 鈥渟ort of buries himself into your brain.鈥
He still plans to vote from abroad, a desire that has helped grow the group Democrats Abroad, an official group with state-level recognition by the Democratic National Committee, whose membership has tripled since 2015, according to a spokeswoman who declined to provide an exact figure.听
But Morse is happy living abroad. In part, because he doesn鈥檛 see things changing anytime soon. While people moved to Canada to protest the Vietnam War, he said, 鈥渋t wasn't systematic or fundamental to the American system.鈥 This time, he said, it feels different.
He said he worries about a more violent or widespread version of Jan. 6 if Trump loses, and that democracy鈥檚 guardrails will fail to hold up.听
鈥淭here's nothing that says that American democracy is permanent and immutable,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd I fear it's coming apart.鈥