Yes... but......
You need to be granted a full gender recognition certificate by the Gender Recognition Panel and then get a new birth certificate which reflects your acquired gender.
With that all in order you should be able to marry your partner.
See the related link for more information.
Yes and no it depends on the state. Most states will allow a post-op transsexual marry a person of the opposite sex of their new gender and will still honor a marriage previous to gender reassignment surgery.
Yes, once they change their sex on their birth certificate. It depends on the state and country they are in, some do not recognize the surgery as changing sex, others do.
If your marriage was legal in Mexico then you are legally married. You need to obtain a divorce or the Mexican marriage may come back to haunt you some day. If you remarried in the UK without obtaining a divorce that marriage would be invalid and would be exposed if your husband ever showed up.
Ordinarily, yes. This would however be contingent upon the legal recognition ofgender reassignment andsame sex marriages in the jurisdiction of residence.
Muslim marriages are not legally recognised in UK law but marriage in Gambia by 'justices' is legally binding in the UK. However if you are already legally married in the UK then you shouldn't marry another person of any religion until you are legally divorced - it would be fraudulent if not bigamism.
Yes, because you have legal documentation to prove it. But if it was vice versa and you got married in Albania, with a traditional wedding. Then you may have a posibility that you are not legally married.
If you legally married her, yes.If you legally married her, yes.If you legally married her, yes.If you legally married her, yes.
If the male to female transsexual is still legally male and not yet legally female then yes. You'd marry the same way a man and woman would as long as the other person is still legally male.
They still have full rights over you until you're legally an adult.
Yes. If you were married legally in SC then anywhere you go you are married legally.
If you are at present in the UK contact your local Citizens' Advice Bureau. From what you write there seem to be a number of irregularities in your status.
If he was free to marry and you married him legally then you are married.If he was free to marry and you married him legally then you are married.If he was free to marry and you married him legally then you are married.If he was free to marry and you married him legally then you are married.