"If you look at the number of birth defects among individuals that are father and daughter or brother and sister it’s about 57 per cent and although you might go oh that’s absolutely terrible ...
He, and you, can still visit for up to 90 days at a time without any formalities. The only change is that you now need to wait before visiting again. Given some of the real issues faced by EU in UK/UK in EU residents since Brexit, that seems pretty minor to me and, judging by comments, many others
There's absolutely nothing wrong with that, but it makes him a holiday home owner, not a resident of any description, entitled to spend as long as they want in their holiday home
To be tax resident in Spain, you need to spend more than 183 days a year there, legally 'part-time residents' can't do that. So he probably pays property tax and sales tax while there, like any holiday home owner
Do the local Spanish people know that you don't pay tax, don't pay social security, the things they have to pay? Or do you assume that they appreciate the part-timers buying houses they can't afford, just because you tip them generously at the restaurant?
Various ways to become a citizen, based on birth, marriage, residency, depends on individual circumstances. Once you are a citizen, you can apply for a passport but you don't have to have one
And yet 82% of people in that survey say they *would* be open to voting for a woman as president. What an odd, click-baity angle for Politico to choose as their headline
"ensuring that citizenship of this country means something" – making it something people do to be able to claim benefits, rather than because they want to be British, seems to demean citizenship rather than make it mean something, but maybe that's just me.
It's ridiculous, utility bills don't prove that you live anywhere, just that you are the account holder for that property. Someone who has a holiday home has utility bills for that property, it doesn't mean they live there.
The UK insists on a passport from every other country whose citizens have ID cards, I'm not sure why anyone would assume that the UK ID card could be used for travel.
"Poultry and livestock feed make up 97% of soybean meal used in the U.S. The other 3% of soybean meal used in the U.S. is in food products like protein alternatives and soy milk."
Maybe Nick should check the info about eligibility for asylum on the UK Gov website – persecution 'including anything else that puts you at risk because of the social, cultural, religious or political situation in your country, for example, your gender, gender identity or sexual orientation'