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The Lords must vote against May's plan to strip Britons of their citizenship

12 points| lucaspiller | 12 years ago |theguardian.com | reply

7 comments

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[+] sentenza|12 years ago|reply
The UK vehemently opposed the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, in the end opting out of it, so UK ex-citizens can't even sue against their state disowning them.
[+] coderzach|12 years ago|reply
Cool hack! We don't want to spy on, torture, or indefinitely detain our own citizens. So just stop them from being citizens, moral crisis averted.
[+] jlockfre|12 years ago|reply
She trains at my gym. I might spark up a conversation with her on this while we're on the mats stretching.
[+] cafard|12 years ago|reply
American here: how much power does the House of Lords have in the matter? I should have thought only a delaying one.
[+] lucaspiller|12 years ago|reply
Pretty much. Once a bill has been approved by the House of Commons they can only reject a bill, but it can be reintroduced later once modified. In this case it serves as a measure for delaying quickly rushed through bills that weren't clearly understood, and bringing them into public light.

Although the Lords aren't elected, their power is more of an advisory role. They can't introduce or kill bills on their own. Also unlike politicians they don't have to worry about keeping their respective parties happy.

[+] contulluipeste|12 years ago|reply
I don't get this "punishment more primitive than torture" nuance. It may be inconvenient (for people born somewhere outside U.K. to loose an inherited citizenship), but isn't a stretch to call that a "punishment"?