Mart UK
VIP MEMBER
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2021
- Messages
- 1,310

Sorry for going off topic, but if anyone is interested... The UK is "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland". Northern Ireland is not part of Great Britain, but is part of the UK. The "British Isles" include Northern Ireland, so the people are British. I'm English, British and a citizen of the UK. England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are separate "nations", but not separate "nation states". They have their own football teams, compete separately in the commonwealth games, yet we're all together in the Olympics as one team. England, Scotland and Northern Ireland have their own bank notes (but still the same "pounds sterling"), Wales does not.Ya, I read that this morning in a different place, but then I read: "The head of state, Queen Elizabeth II, holds the title Lord of Mann and is represented by a Lieutenant Governor. " (Now Charles)
From the link you provided: The Isle of Man is an internally self-governing dependency of the British Crown and its people are British citizens.
So, another uninformed US question: Are British Citizens UK Citizens or is there a difference?
Guam is a US territory, has its own government, its people are US citizens but cannot vote in presidential elections and although they have representation in congress cannot vote there. If we had a King, it would sound about the same![]()
Just so that's clear

Since Brexit, Northern Ireland retains an open trading border with the European Union (no border restrictions with Eire), requiring some x-trade border restrictions between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, technically introducing a trade border within the same country. That has caused deep political problems in Northern Ireland. Bit of a mess, which could yet get ugly.