Puerto Rico has no electoral votes. But everyone born in Puerto Rico is a US Citizen.
Meaning Puerto Ricans who are currently living stateside (ex: studying at a university and staying enough months of the year to qualify for residency) can vote.
Similarly, a… Californian… who is living in Puerto Rico has no electoral votes. Because USA assigns votes by land.
Every Puerto Rican is a USA citizen who has the right to vote. As long as they’re living in the correct area (ie: inside the 50 fully accepted states).
Seems kind of fucked up that an American can move to Europe and still vote in the state they came from, but cannot do the same if they move to PR (a US territory)…
Puerto Rico has no electoral votes. But everyone born in Puerto Rico is a US Citizen.
Meaning Puerto Ricans who are currently living stateside (ex: studying at a university and staying enough months of the year to qualify for residency) can vote.
Similarly, a… Californian… who is living in Puerto Rico has no electoral votes. Because USA assigns votes by land.
Every Puerto Rican is a USA citizen who has the right to vote. As long as they’re living in the correct area (ie: inside the 50 fully accepted states).
Why do US citizens living abroad get to vote then?
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kathleenpeddicord/2024/08/14/how-to-vote-in-the-us-presidential-election-as-an-expat/
https://www.overseasvotefoundation.org/vote-from-abroad-overseas-voting
Seems kind of fucked up that an American can move to Europe and still vote in the state they came from, but cannot do the same if they move to PR (a US territory)…