Jump to content

Brit expat voting rights in UK elections and referendums


Recommended Posts

Some may feel they have no connection with the UK other than a passport having been out of the UK for decades (. often the very same, bizarrely, who support even an extreme no deal brexit).

 

Because they think Britannia still rue's the waves and the red passport should only be the thing that opens up the world or they just like carrying around a fad wad of worthless pounds its a comfort thing or again I could be completely wrong but I'm sure one will be along shortly to clarify why we would all like to know ????

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
On 9/15/2019 at 3:59 AM, sammieuk1 said:

Some may feel they have no connection with the UK other than a passport having been out of the UK for decades (. often the very same, bizarrely, who support even an extreme no deal brexit).

 

Because they think Britannia still rue's the waves and the red passport should only be the thing that opens up the world or they just like carrying around a fad wad of worthless pounds its a comfort thing or again I could be completely wrong but I'm sure one will be along shortly to clarify why we would all like to know ????

Nope , do confine just making things up about non existent people and stating what these made-up non existing people think

  • Like 2
Link to comment

If the expatriate Briton hasn't cared to maintain his/her legal right to vote at home while gallivanting around the globe, that's entirely their own fault wrought of their own blissful ignorance and a misplaced sense of entitlement. Giving them back the vote that they so cavalierly discarded as irrelevant is a slap in the face of those with the intelligence who appreciated that retaining your voting rights in your birth nation AND HAVE EXERCISED THAT VOTING RIGHT, is a thing of fundamentally great importance.

 

It is only now that the recent rigors of Thai immigration procedural changes and the rubbish exchange rates have conspired with the slowly gathering global economic depression to garner the faltering attention of those woefully and misbegotten short-sighted pseudo-colonials. The chickens are truly coming home to roost but I suggest that the door to the NHS and free bus pass hen house should be boarded up.

 

As for these government-endorsed petitioning platforms, if you are not registered to vote in the UK, then you shouldn't be allowed to sign the bloody things.

  • Like 1
  • Sad 3
Link to comment
1 hour ago, alan grice said:

Why should a Brit Vote.?. They voted over Brexit and Yobs caused problems cause they didn’t like it.emoji232.png


Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect

the left doesn't want people to vote, especially if they are not dependent on them. The Remain Parliament refuses a General Election, and wants to choose for us... despite the result of the referendum they hate.

AFW.jpg

ed9637b99b32a9302ec24278e35980c2.jpg&sp=

  • Like 1
  • Sad 1
Link to comment
18 hours ago, Kalasin Jo said:

You may also believe that you can return to the UK at any time and use the NHS for free and claim benefits but currently you can't until you have demonstrated that you are "ordinarily resident" there. That's at least 3 months and the definition is a moveable feast in other ways too for the UK authorities

Not true.  When you return to the UK, you only have to state that you have returned for settlement.  You will get full NHS and benefits immediately.  I know as I've done that.  My children changed my mind after 6 months and we returned to Thailand.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
19 hours ago, Kalasin Jo said:

You may also believe that you can return to the UK at any time and use the NHS for free

You can now as of April 2019. I was back in July for 3 weeks and a good friend of mine who works for the NHS told me this has happened. It must be right as I did not have to pay the NHS fees when at Specsavers! 

Edited by worrab
Link to comment
1 hour ago, CaptainNemo said:

...or forced out of the UK by unprecedented mass immigration pushing up the cost of living, doubling house prices, an emergent police state instigated by new labour, and a rabid extreme left establishment that attacks traditional families and everything that isn't a minority... refusing to pay for it is legal resistence.

Forced out... ROFLMAO.

 

I reckon with all those cctv cameras, the Tories have done more to facilitate your fanciful 'police state'.

 

PS: Did you ever visit Dresden in the 1980's? No? I thought not. I had been working in The People's Republic of China for a couple of years back then and went on holiday to East Germany, just for a reality check.

  • Confused 1
Link to comment
20 minutes ago, worrab said:

Yes they can as long as they were registered to vote whilst living in the UK. I have done it and am registered as an overseas voter.

Likewise, in fact I got a note a couple of weeks ago advising me to renew my status, which I did online, I left the UK in 2007.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
18 hours ago, elliss said:

 

 UK residents , and  those paying community tax,  are the only ones , who should have the choice to vote .

  The rest are just, i have , etc ...

 

Well I have been paying income tax in the UK since July 1959 and will continue to do so until I die. 

 

What was the slogan in America during the 1700s?

 

NO taxation without representation.

 

https://www.investopedia.com/terms/t/tax_without_representation.asp

 

What Is Taxation Without Representation?
Taxation without representation is the act of being taxed by an authority without the benefit of having elected representatives. The term became part of an anti-British slogan when the original 13 American colonies aimed to revolt against the British Empire.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
14 minutes ago, NanLaew said:

NanLaew, a British citizen of Scottish birth and genealogy going back beyond Bannockburn, who is not resident and not ordinarily resident in the UK (and has been such since 1977) or Thailand, successfully became a registered British voter in 2015. This after being DENIED a Scottish referendum vote by the SNP. This is the same straw-clutching SNP who handily granted a vote to my English tenant and his wife who had been renting my castle for only 14 months... and now want to give 16 year-olds the vote.

 

Subsequently, NanLaew who is STILL not resident and not ordinarily resident in the UK, among other things, used his vote to Leave the EU. My mind was already made up on that but when I later learned that most Scots (that bothered to vote) had optioned to Remain and the SNP started demanding another independence referendum, I had a wee party to celebrate their consummate and enduring misfortune.

 

 

I had a "wee" party to when I woke up to find my income and savings here had lost north of 20% whilst counting sheep and over the ensuing years a dirty protest has sadly started ???? 

Link to comment
19 hours ago, elliss said:

 

 UK residents , and  those paying community tax,  are the only ones , who should have the choice to vote .

  The rest are just, i have , etc ...

 

I have been faced with this type of thinking in my own country which I vehemently oppose. I am a citizen and as such retain the right to vote. I apologize for stepping in to what is a British policy but as another participating democracy ally I oppose restricting voting rights. Many of the working middle class retired outside our own countries is a result of our being priced out of our own countries. To further punish those fleeing for economic reasons is adding insult to injury (same can be applied to your having your pension raises frozen).

  • Like 2
Link to comment

People who've decided to live abroad want a say in how their old country is run after 15 years of living in a foreign country, sounds generous to me. The tax would swing it for me, if you pay UK tax then I guess you ought to have a say.

For those whining about the exchange rate i'd suggest that was poor financial planning, you should have got your money out when it was 70 odd baht to the pound. Don't get me wrong, I feel for you guys but trying to blame Brexit for the situation you find yourselves in just doesn't cut it.

What is the argument for letting people who don't live in the UK having a say in tying the UK to the EU? I don't get it. 

Link to comment
1 hour ago, billd766 said:

What Is Taxation Without Representation?
Taxation without representation is the act of being taxed by an authority without the benefit of having elected representatives. The term became part of an anti-British slogan when the original 13 American colonies aimed to revolt against the British Empire.

Pretty much the same reason I quit the working in the US under the L1 visa where I was taxed like the next man but didn't have a say on where it went.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
4 hours ago, NanLaew said:

If the expatriate Briton hasn't cared to maintain his/her legal right to vote at home while gallivanting around the globe, that's entirely their own fault wrought of their own blissful ignorance and a misplaced sense of entitlement. Giving them back the vote that they so cavalierly discarded as irrelevant is a slap in the face of those with the intelligence who appreciated that retaining your voting rights in your birth nation AND HAVE EXERCISED THAT VOTING RIGHT, is a thing of fundamentally great importance.

 

It is only now that the recent rigors of Thai immigration procedural changes and the rubbish exchange rates have conspired with the slowly gathering global economic depression to garner the faltering attention of those woefully and misbegotten short-sighted pseudo-colonials. The chickens are truly coming home to roost but I suggest that the door to the NHS and free bus pass hen house should be boarded up.

 

As for these government-endorsed petitioning platforms, if you are not registered to vote in the UK, then you shouldn't be allowed to sign the bloody things.

Its not a government endorsed platform, it's a parliamentary platform. Not the same thing at all.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
3 hours ago, CaptainNemo said:

...or forced out of the UK by unprecedented mass immigration pushing up the cost of living, doubling house prices, an emergent police state instigated by new labour, and a rabid extreme left establishment that attacks traditional families and everything that isn't a minority... refusing to pay for it is legal resistence.

How do you know all this if you are not living there? Seems to me right now it is the rabid extreme right that is attempting to destroy values and bring in a police state.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.









×
×
  • Create New...