Only people who were British subjects on the Commonwealth electoral roll at 25 January 1984 are allowed to vote without Australian citizenship.
Yes, an American citizen doesnt lose that citizenship when another citizenship is gained.
The New Zealand and the Australian economies are managed by separate Governments, and thus the separate currencies.
That means your state doesnt allow a debtor to use federal exemptions in order to keep items/property of a certain value. If your state doesnt allow federal exemptions, then the state will have their "own" BK exemptions.
of course you can.The army doesnt judge you on how much you weigh
none. the Australian cattle dog is a family dog and doesnt like competition, if u must, get a fish or bird. always in a cage
BRIAR. whaataapp man. and the answer is who DOESNT try cases of federal crimes;) -youll never know who this is! <333 youu
Only those working for the federal government I suppose....?
The Australian Constitution gives the commonwealth parliament the ability to legislate on a range of issues, but it doesnt take away that power from the states. (Although, a commonwealth law will prevail over a state law) so with few exceptions, the feds and the states look after the same things.
In American law, yes. I think it's also true of Australian law. The Australian must register the baby as Australian born overseas to Australian parent - it doesnt say if the parent must be the man or the woman. I don't remember if the law mentions marriage. If born in Australia and one parent is Australian, then it should be automatic citizen.
Doesnt matter where youre from you need to go through the process of naturalization in order to become a U.S. citizen. But the process can take a long time for some.
no it doesnt have half human head,and whiting is common fish caught in Australian oceans
By renouncing your citizenship before a consulate officer (you cannot renounce citizenship inside the U.S.). If you are renouncing because you are a dual national and dont really "consider" yourself an American, you should have no problems. If you are only an American citizen and want to renounce as a form of protest, then there are more difficulties because the embassy will usually want to know that you have permanent residency/citizenship in another country (the U.S. doesnt like to make people "stateless"). Note: if the U.S. suspects that you are renouncing citizenship merely because you want to avoid U.S. worldwide taxation, then although you have renounced your citizenship, the IRS will still tax you as an American citizen based on your income, even if earned completely outside the U.S.