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  Msg # 31758 of 32022 on ZZUK4447, Monday 11-06-22, 6:04  
  From: ZAKJAMES  
  To: JNUGENT  
  Subj: Re: Brexit deal almost agreed! (1/2)  
 XPost: uk.politics.misc, uk.d-i-y, uk.radio.amateur 
 From: gtyr@gmail.com 
  
 "JNugent"  wrote in message 
 news:h0gko1Fglo0U1@mid.individual.net... 
 > On 13/10/2019 02:25, ZakJames wrote: 
 >> 
 >> 
 >> "JNugent"  wrote in message 
 >> news:h0f9f4F86o7U1@mid.individual.net... 
 >>> On 12/10/2019 23:47, ZakJames wrote: 
 >>>> 
 >>>> 
 >>>> "JNugent"  wrote in message 
 >>>> news:h0f0boF6deiU1@mid.individual.net... 
 >>>>> On 12/10/2019 16:35, tim... wrote: 
 >>>>>> 
 >>>>>> 
 >>>>>> "Dave Plowman (News)"  wrote in message 
 >>>>>> news:5801d4258edave@davenoise.co.uk... 
 >>>>>>> In article , 
 >>>>>>>   Cursitor Doom  wrote: 
 >>>>>>>> I still have a legitimate interest, mate. And if there's another 
 >>>>>>>> Referendum I'll be voting in it again, same as before, just like 
 >>>>>>>> everyone else who voted Leave - plus not a few former Remainers 
 >>>>>>>> who've 
 >>>>>>>> seen the light over the last 3 years. 
 >>>>>>> 
 >>>>>>> Oddly, most the polls seem to show the opposite has happened. 
 >>>>>> 
 >>>>>> very marginally 
 >>>>>> 
 >>>>>> and to less than the extent that Remain was in the lead before the 
 >>>>>> last vote 
 >>>>>> 
 >>>>>> and you know what campaigning did to that lead. 
 >>>>>> 
 >>>>>>> Wonder what the average UK voter feels about those who have fled the 
 >>>>>>> country to avoid paying taxes being allowed to vote? 
 >>>>>> 
 >>>>>> I for one think that they've got a bloody cheek complaining about 
 >>>>>> being disenfranchised - they chose to be disenfranchised. 
 >>>>> 
 >>>>> That's not as straightforward as some people seem to think. 
 >>>>> 
 >>>>> An ex-pat Brit living in (say) Spain might have a vote in local 
 >>>>> elections in their area of residence, but unless they take pout 
 >>>>> Spanish citizenship they won't be allowed to vote in Spain's 
 >>>>> parliamantary elections (and quite right too). 
 >>>> 
 >>>>> But unless they're allowed to vote in UK Parliamentary elections - for 
 >>>>> life - they are disenfranchised from having any say in the government 
 >>>>> of anywhere. And that cannot be right. They are not second-class 
 >>>>> people who should have fewer rights than others. 
 >>>> 
 >>>> That€€€s always been the case with those who choose not 
 >>>> to take up citizenship in the place they choose to move 
 >>>> to. They are in fact second class people by that choice 
 >>>> and rightly so imo. 
 >>> 
 >>> "That's always been the case". 
 >> 
 >>> But it shouldn't be. 
 >> 
 >> That€€€s very arguable. 
 >> 
 >>> There is no case to be made for disenfranchising anyone. 
 >> 
 >> There is for those who choose to be in a particular country 
 >> for a while but who have no intention of staying there forever. 
 >> Why should those who choose to move to say Spain for the 
 >> lower prices and better weather have any say on how that 
 >> country is run ?  Let alone on more important issues like 
 >> whether the Basque separatists should be allowed to have 
 >> their own country or be part of the EU ? 
 >> 
 >>> What is the principled difference between a UK citizen who works abroad 
 >>> (eg, a Foreign Office employee) and a UK citizen who retires abroad? 
 >> 
 >> Nothing with regard to their right to vote in the UK is concerned 
 >> unless they never plan to return to the UK again. But neither should 
 >> have any say in how the country they are working in or have retired 
 >> to does things either imo. Both are free to decide if how that country 
 >> does things is to their liking, but not free to vote on any changes 
 >> that they would like to see there. 
  
 > That's your opinion. 
  
 That€€€s why I said imo. 
  
 > The idea of a tax-paying, law-abiding, citizen who isn't allowed to vote 
 > anywhere in the world 
  
 That€€€s hardly ever the case, All modern first and 
 most second world countrys allow their citizens 
 to vote when they are out of their country. 
  
 > must surely be anathema to anyone correctly considering the situation. 
  
 The actual situation is that they can still 
 vote in their native country unless they 
 are in a foreign jail in the case of some 
 countrys that don€€€t allow felons to vote. 
  
 > Are you sure you aren't just fearful of how most of them would vote? 
  
 Quite sure. Most who are out of their country don€€€t 
 bother to vote because more effort is required to do that. 
  
 >> I don€€€t even agree with say poms who choose to migrate to somewhere 
 >> like Australia or NZ being able to proclaim that those places should do 
 >> things the way the UK does things benefits or politics wise either. 
  
 > Neither do I. And that has [precisely nothing whatever to do with the 
 > issue of whether they should be denied a vote. 
  
 They arent in fact denied a vote at all. They are 
 free to vote in UK elections for at least 15 years, 
  
 >> They should decide if they like the way things are done before they 
 >> migrate to another country, not try to change them after they have 
 >> migrated. 
  
 > Quite so, though of course, it has nothing to do with the topic. 
  
 Wrong. 
  
 >>>>> Because UK Parliamentary representation is so tied to local geography, 
 >>>>> ex-pats need to be either (a) limited to a vote as though still living 
 >>>>> at their last UK address (which they might even still own), or (b) 
 >>>>> placed within a new non-geographical constituency for British citizens 
 >>>>> not currently resident in the UK. There would probably have to be a 
 >>>>> multiplicity of those because there are millions of ex-pats. These 
 >>>>> constituencies could even be based on broad regions of the UK, each 
 >>>>> with an electorate size of the target average size as aimed for by the 
 >>>>> Boundary Commission and equivalents. 
 >>>> 
 >>>> I did notice that Italians emigrants are allowed to vote in Italian 
 >>>> elections. 
 >>>> Not sure what happens about which constituency they get to vote in. 
 >> 
 >>> Perhaps we (the UK) should make enquiries. 
 >> 
 >> There isnt likely to be any very satisfactory way of doing that. 
 >> Even say being allowed to vote in the constituency that they 
 >> had previously lived in doesn€€€t make a lot of sense given 
 >> that as migrants they clearly chose to leave there and with 
 >> such tiny constituencies as the UK has, it could just have 
 >> been where there happened to be an affordable place to 
 >> buy or rent that they happened to find appealing etc or 
 >> a job that happened to have a vacancy at the time. 
 > 
 > That's a view and it has some legitimacy. 
 > 
 > What has no legitimacy at all is a view that such people should be denied 
 > a parliamantary vote altogether, 
  
 None of them are. They are free to get naturalised 
 in the country they choose to migrate to, but arent 
 free to vote in a country they choose to work in for 
 a while, or choose to retire to because its cheaper 
 to live there or because the weather is much better 
  
 [continued in next message] 
  
 --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05 
  * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2) 

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