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9 answers

Yes, as long as you have US Citizenship by virtue of birth and not naturalization. If you are a Naturalized US Citizen and were a Canadian Citizen before becoming a US Citizen you are suppose to give up your Canadian citizenship. Although, no one actually does.

If you are a Naturalized US Citizen and then became a Naturalized Canadian citizen you would lose your US Citizenship, since Naturalized US Citizens cannot become naturalized citizens of other countries without losing US Citizenship.

Even if you did this, again, unless you have somehow annoyed the US Government, you most likely would not automatically lose your US citizenship. For this to happen, either you would have to tell the US Government you have become naturalized in another country or Canada would have to tell the US you have became naturalized in Canada.

Basically, if you were born in the US or one of your parents was a US citizens at the time of your birth, your citizenship can never be taken away from you.

The US does not officially recognize dual citizenship. This does not mean another country cannot determine you to be a citizen of said country, but as far the US is concerned you are either a US Citizen or you are not a US Citizen. Any other citizenship is between you and the country that claims you as a citizen.

2006-10-26 11:08:31 · answer #1 · answered by TheMayor 3 · 4 0

Yes, you can vote in two countries, provided you are not breaking any laws in so doing. There are many cases in which you would not be breaking any laws.

The people here saying that you can t be a dual citizen are unequivocally wrong. The US State Department does acknowledge dual citizenship, as evidenced by its interpretations of Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965.

2016-11-10 04:33:07 · answer #2 · answered by ? 1 · 1 0

The polls say Conservative. A month or so interior the previous it could have been an outstanding majority yet who's unsleeping now. Ontario has better Conservative MPs than Alberta does. the sole places with good Liberal help are Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. and that's merely the indoors component to those cities. the encircling and suburbs vote Conservative or NDP.

2016-11-25 22:15:13 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If you're a citizen you can vote.

I've never understood dual citizenship-- when I was naturalized, it clearly states on the oath that you renounce alligence to other countries..... don't get it.

2006-10-26 10:43:04 · answer #4 · answered by dapixelator 6 · 0 0

America doe not recognize dual citizenship, why they call black African American? Is it dual citizenship right there?

2015-05-14 10:34:38 · answer #5 · answered by ? 1 · 3 4

Yah. I have it and I have voted since I was 18.

2006-10-26 10:41:32 · answer #6 · answered by stephaniemariewalksonwater 5 · 1 0

I think it would depend on residency, you vote in the state that you live in.

2006-10-26 10:42:51 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

yes but why

2006-10-26 10:42:42 · answer #8 · answered by James K 2 · 0 0

yes.

2006-10-26 10:42:18 · answer #9 · answered by big_bookworm 2 · 0 0

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