Quote:I'm not sure that your assertion is correct. As a British citizen, I have the legal right to enter the UK and stay for as long as I want. Period. I really do not know what would happen if I entered on a foreign passport and overstayed my time.
I was referring to the position in another EU member state who could deport you if you did not posess a valid uk passport establishing your right of full abode in the UK. The UK would not deport you for overstaying a visa on a US Passport but they might fine you for entering the country using the wrong document when your intention was to take up permanent uk residence again.
Quote:How can a British citizen be deported? The UK birth certificate is the document I used to establish my citizenship for the purpose of obtaining a passport in the first place. Taking citizizenship of another country does not void the British citizenship I have.
Correct but you would not manage to stay in another EU country after your US Passport visa had expired without producing a British passport. You could of course at that stage always produce your birth certificate at the local embassy to obtain a British passport. You might even need to telephone the local embassy's information line.
By the way the USA does quite often require those who want to acquire its nationality to give up their own original nationality to get it. But I believe this is not a usual requirement for spouses of US citizens born in the USA.
Quote:My MP is Jonathan Shaw. He has responded to me about 0870, but that was when I lived in Kent. I have to contact him through the parliamentary web form - not ideal as it wants postcode and address details and can't cope very well with foreign addresses, but I appear to have confirmation of delivery.
You could always email him instead using shawj@parliament.uk and cut out the parliamentary web form. The only difference is you would mess up the statistics of the Parliamentary website as to what types of enquiry they were getting and from where.