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Luca's avatar

I don’t think the premise that all British citizens are equal is as obvious as suggested. As a dual national, I’m clearly not on equal footing to those who are only British nationals, and even more so those who have no eligibility for any other nationalities but British. For example, were a draft to be introduced in Britain, dual nationals could evade it quite easily, whereas British-only nationals couldn’t, so clearly there’s an entrenched inequality there. Then there’s the fact that dual nationals (or those eligible for such) have a different nation they could easily move to and be accepted in as if it were their own, an option unavailable to British-only nationals. That strikes me as a clear qualitative inequality.

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Yasmin Ali's avatar

Sometimes it is necessary to state the obvious, and to keep restating it. However, I think there’s a bigger problem than the campaign - it feels like a concerted campaign - to render phrases like ‘white British’ and ‘white working class’ the norm for inclusion in the category of citizen. It is that in law we already have two classes of British-born citizen; those born to two British-born, British citizen parents, and those who through at least one parent may theoretically qualify for the passport of another country.

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