I applied for citizenship already once but since I couldn’t prove I was in the country the entire time during my first year since my employment was a bit random at the time I got rejected.
My only option is to wait another year so in can prove it even though if they really wanted they could probably check their own records to see my immigration activity.
It's quite difficult to get citizenship I know someone who got a 10 page letter citing a lot of random legal clauses for why she got rejected.
Hell it looked almost like they were trying too hard and felt borderline racist to me but I could be imagining things.
That's interesting. I am in a similar situation as you. But I have been living in the UK a lot longer (since 2005, so 11 years). I'm 20 years old, so I have now been living in the UK for a much longer proportion of my life than in any other country. It's annoying that I don't get to vote in something as important as this.
I'm sure there are plenty of British citizens who are expats living all over Europe, and despite the possibility that they have been living outside the UK for a large proportion of their life they are still eligible to vote. Perhaps I am wrong and there is some rule against this, so please do correct me if that is the case. But if it's not, then how is this fair? Why do they get a say in the decisions a country is making without being a resident of that country?
I will most certainly be attempting to apply for citizenship. Unfortunately the prospect of being rejected, for something which will quite likely be very random and illogical (likely designed to catch as many people out as possible), makes me worried. From the (admittedly quick) research that I have performed to date, it seems that just the act of applying requires a significant sum of money (around a £1000?). If my application gets rejected, then will that money essentially be gone?
On top of all that, I am still a student, it's not easy to part with £1000 under these circumstances.
For what it's worth in the case of these 2 British expats living outside the UK for long periods they lost a legal challenge against their ineligibility.
My only option is to wait another year so in can prove it even though if they really wanted they could probably check their own records to see my immigration activity.
It's quite difficult to get citizenship I know someone who got a 10 page letter citing a lot of random legal clauses for why she got rejected.
Hell it looked almost like they were trying too hard and felt borderline racist to me but I could be imagining things.