On Sun, 05 May 2013 18:38:25 -0400, Henry <
He...@example.com> wrote:
>1. Am I right in assuming that British law saw no obstacle in him
>becoming Prime Minister since he was born in a British colony? I am
>Canadian, not British, so I don't know what citizenship requirements
>apply to British prime ministers. I imagine being born in a British
>colony was deemed "good enough" at the time. Or was he, in effect,
>considered "naturalized" owing to his long residence in Britain?
There is no law saying what nationality the British Prime Minister has
to be.
Indeed, the post has no legal standing.
Neither is there any law relating to the nationality of MPs.
Any commonwealth citizen legally resident in the UK may vote in all
domestic elections.
Non Commonwealth citizens legally resident in the UK take some 5 years
to qualify for a vote in parliamentary elections and can vote in
'local' elections at once.
Rules for electors for the European Parliamentary election are
different.
>I also have one minor question. Does anyone know if the actor Jude Law
>is a descendant of Andrew Bonar Law? Just curious. I'm not sure how
>common the surname Law is in Britain.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1435152/Family-Detective.html