(f) "Two reasons stand out. American politicians must live in the places they represent, and ideally come from there as well. * * * In England in 2015, less than half of MPS were born in the regions they represented; still less in the actual constituency. Some who have the same strong regional accents as their voters say they meet constituents who can hardly believe they are talking to an MP. The second reason is the dominance of London in Britain's politics, economy and culture. Paris similarly dinubates France, and politicians are nostly expected to minimise regional accents in politcs there, too. Germany is like America, a newer and federal state, with local power bases and an economy spred more evenly across the country."
(i) "American politicians must live in the places they represent"
In Taiwan there is a law requiring that. I long believe the same in US. But the quotation turns out to be wrong.
(A) Constitutional Qualifications. US House of Representatives, undated
https://history.house.gov/Instit ... nal-Qualifications/
("The Constitution placed notably few hurdles between ordinary citizens and becoming a Member of the U.S. House of Representatives. The founders wanted the House to be the legislative chamber closest to the people—the least restrictive on age, citizenship, and the only federal office at the time subject to frequent popular election. * * * The constitutional qualifications for office originate in British law. Members of the House of Commons had to live in the shires or boroughs they represented, although that was rarely done in practice. The founders used that example to motivate the requirement that Members of the House live in the state they represent. This would increase the likelihood that they would be familiar with the people’s interests there, but there was no mention during the debates about living in the same district. The district system emerged later as states dealt with how to fairly organize their congressional delegations")
(B) Jack Maskell, Qualifications of Members of Congress. Congressional Research Service, Jan 15, 2015
https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R41946.pdf
(summary: "There are three, and only three, standing qualifications for US Senator or Representative in Congress which are expressly set out in the US Constitution: age (25 for the House, 30 for the Senate); citizenship (at least seven years for the House, nine years for the Senate); and inhabitancy in the state at the time elected [not when campaigning]. US Constitution, Article I, Section 2, cl. 2 (House); and Article I, Section 3, cl. 3 (Senate). The Supreme Court of the United States has affirmed the historical understanding that the Constitution provides the exclusive qualifications to be a Member of Congress, and that neither a state nor Congress itself may add to or change such
qualifications to federal office, absent a constitutional amendment") (emphasis original)
(ii) Great Britain
(A) Member of Parliament (United Kingdom)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Member_of_Parliament_(United_Kingdom)
(Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 set out a fixed 5-year term)
(B) Who can stand as an MP? UK Parliament, undated
https://www.parliament.uk/about/ ... ing-mps/candidates/
("People wishing to stand as an MP must be over 18 years of age, be a British citizen or citizen of a Commonwealth country or the Republic of Ireland. Candidates must be nominated by ten parliamentary electors of the constituency they wish to stand in. Authorisation is required to stand for a specific party, otherwise candidates will be described as independent or have no description. In order to encourage only serious candidates to stand, a £500 deposit is required when submitting the nomination papers - returned if the candidate receives over five per cent of the total votes cast. Certain people are disqualified from standing as an MP [presumably convicted felons]")
The "elector" in British English is same as "voter" in Americna English. (In England there is "electoral registration," whereas in US there is "voter registration." In US, an elector is a member of electoral college to elect a president.)
(C) Dock Leonard and Roger Mortimore, Elections in Britain; A voter's guide. 5th ed. Palgrave Macmillan (2005), at page 84
https://books.google.com/books?i ... mp;lpg=PA84&dq="MP"+parliament+"residency+requirement"+britain&source=bl&ots=yxhY5JFCon&sig=ACfU3U0p1J5Fua7bci6PKSblVCEsRMilMw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiU7Ju4hrjjAhVEwlkKHZJXBv04ChDoATAAegQICRAB#v=onepage&q="MP"%20parliament%20"residency%20requirement"%20britain&f=false
("Convicted criminals. Convicted persons serving a sentence of more than one year, or an indefinite sentence, while they are either detained or unlawfully at large; the election or nomination of such a person is void. * * * Residency. Unlike many countries such as the USA, there is no residency requirement for candidates in parliamentary elections: a candidate need not live in the constituency which he or she hopes to represent. However, such a requirement does exist in local elections, including those for the devolved assemblies: a candidate must be a local government elector for the area of the local authority concerned, or have resided there or worked there for twelve months preceding the date of the election. Candidates for Mayor of London or the London Assembly must either live or work in London")
In US a member of House of Representatives is from a Congressional district, whereas in UK an MP, constituency.
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