Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
#31
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Re: Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
The point I was trying to make is that "the following September" is not the same as "the September of the calendar year following the year of registration."
Consider a registration done in January 2014.
"The following September" would be September 2014 in the opinion of most people - since that is the first September following January 2014.
"The September of the calendar year following the year of registration" would be September 2015.
Consider a registration done in January 2014.
"The following September" would be September 2014 in the opinion of most people - since that is the first September following January 2014.
"The September of the calendar year following the year of registration" would be September 2015.
#32
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Re: Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
Okay, here's the response from HMPO.
"We do still accept consular birth certificates however you are required to submit the original full birth certificate as well. The FCO is a completely different department from Her Majesty's Passport Office and this is why we require the information."
Not perfect but still a marked improvement over having to send the parent's original certificates and passports.
"We do still accept consular birth certificates however you are required to submit the original full birth certificate as well. The FCO is a completely different department from Her Majesty's Passport Office and this is why we require the information."
Not perfect but still a marked improvement over having to send the parent's original certificates and passports.
The original full birth certs of who? The applicant? The parents? Both?
#33
Re: Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
The point I was trying to make is that "the following September" is not the same as "the September of the calendar year following the year of registration."
Consider a registration done in January 2014.
"The following September" would be September 2014 in the opinion of most people - since that is the first September following January 2014.
"The September of the calendar year following the year of registration" would be September 2015.
Consider a registration done in January 2014.
"The following September" would be September 2014 in the opinion of most people - since that is the first September following January 2014.
"The September of the calendar year following the year of registration" would be September 2015.
The applicant I presume. No explanation why this advice is not included in the support documents guidance however.
#34
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Re: Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
I meant in the case of there being a consular birth cert for the applicant. Do they still seriously want the original US birth cert of the applicant and the original birth certs of the parents? If so, what's the point in having a consular birth cert? Does that just get you off the hook for sending in the parents' passports? I would have thought that a consular birth cert would be sufficient proof of British citizenship otherwise it's really not as useful as I first thought.
#35
Re: Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
Probably more useful if your kid is born in a place that doesn't keep good records or is in civil unrest. First thoughts are of many African countries, then I would suggest getting another birth certificate. My feelings are it will be fairly easy to get a US birth certificate for many years.
#36
Re: Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
I meant in the case of there being a consular birth cert for the applicant. Do they still seriously want the original US birth cert of the applicant and the original birth certs of the parents? If so, what's the point in having a consular birth cert? Does that just get you off the hook for sending in the parents' passports? I would have thought that a consular birth cert would be sufficient proof of British citizenship otherwise it's really not as useful as I first thought.
However given how often policies change I would argue it's still worth it in the long run. You can't be sure what the policy will be in two or three years' time let alone twenty or thirty but if the birth is registered now then you know you and your children (and your grandchildren) will always have access to an official government issued document that states your children's entitlement to British citizenship.
#37
Re: Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
Are you joking? He wrote a whole article about it, it's somewhere on the web. I remember seeing him interviewed on the news about it and he got dinged by the IRS for penalties on failing to file and had to pay capital gains tax going back some years.
#38
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Re: Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
'Boris Johnson has finally agreed to pay a huge tax bill to the US government ahead of his visit to America, despite previously insisting he would not bow to the “absolutely outrageous" demand.
The tax bill is believed to relate to the sale of a house in Islington, north London.
Mr Johnson and his barrister wife Marina Wheeler bought the Furlong Road house in 1999 for £470,000. After the London property market boomed, they sold the house for £1.2million in 2009 – a £730,000 increase.'
So 5 years later, he finally agrees to pay a tax bill he should have paid in 2010.
#39
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Re: Is my USA-born son already a British citizen?
I'd like to know where it's actually been documented that he didn't file his tax return? Clearly he did, as he was aware of the sum owed - and he cowered to the Americans so much that he agreed to pay it anyway, despite his nauseating moaning about it.