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Topic: Absentee voting question  (Read 2705 times)

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Absentee voting question
« on: January 07, 2020, 01:06:13 AM »
I was reading up on registering for an absentee ballot (Yes, I’m very early for this but this is the most important election of my  life so better to be safe than sorry) and I’m a bit confused about something. It says to choose your state of voting residence and I’m not sure I know what that is. My driver’s license is California but I changed my mailing address to a PO Box in Texas when I moved here because they don’t have state taxes and it just seemed like a good way to avoid any possible tax complications. Does anybody have any experience with this and can give me a bit of advice please?

Thank you in advance...


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Re: Absentee voting question
« Reply #1 on: January 07, 2020, 07:11:55 PM »
You request an absentee ballot from the last state where you were registered to vote.

I would be VERY careful w/r/t claiming Texas residency on the basis of a PO box address. If you didn't actually move to Texas and establish residency, that could be problematic for you, and likely illegal as well. You can break ties to your last state of residence in other ways. I did it in Virginia, which is one of the states that is notorious for trying to hold onto folks for state tax forever.
Married December 1992 (my 'old flame' whom I first met in the mid-70s)
1st move to UK - 1993 (Letter of Consent granted at British Embassy in Washington DC)
ILR - 1994 (1 year later - no fee way back then!)
Back to US in 2000
Returned to UK July 2011 (Spousal Visa/KOL endorsement)
ILR - September 2011
Application for naturalization submitted July 2014
Approval received 15-10-14; ceremony scheduled for 10 November!
Passport arrived 25 November 2014. Finally done!


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Re: Absentee voting question
« Reply #2 on: January 07, 2020, 09:26:05 PM »
Interesting. How did you break ties?

Thank you for this information. It’s greatly appreciated!


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Re: Absentee voting question
« Reply #3 on: January 08, 2020, 10:02:37 AM »
Virginia has a set procedure for change of domicile.You first approach the state dept. of revenue, and a form is sent. You fil in the form and send with all the "proof" they require that you no longer live in VA or have ties to the state. In our case, hubby had only been in VA since 2000 when we moved to the US so that I could work (long story). At the time, I had ILR here and was a US citizen only; hubby was the Brit, and applied for a green card, and became a US citizen in 2010.

Fast forward to 2011 when we decided to return to the UK and I started the visa process again. Hubs was retired and I was semi-retired (I did consulting work, and did one assignment in early 2012 before calling it quits. In late 2013, we initiated the request for an official ruling on change of domicile.

We had to prove that we had no ties at all to VA - no property, no vehicles registered in the state, no drivers license (easy as VA requires that any change of address is reported within 30 days, and automatically cancels if you report a foreign address), no financial accounts (we kept a US bank account, but changed our address to the UK address), cancelled voter registration (this doesn't affect your right to vote in federal elections by absentee ballot), affirmed that we had no children in any public school, paid taxes in the UK, were on the electoral roll (applied to hubby only initially), possessed a UK drivers license, and proved ownership of a vehicle here, and a pile of other papers, which thankfully they allowed me to scan to PDF and email. It then took over a year for VA to sift through the "proof". By this time I was in my mid-60s, and it helped that I had lived outside of VA for over 50 years and was born in a different state. I also submitted additional evidence of change of domicile when I applied for British citizenship in 2014.

We finally got an official letter stating that our request for change of domicile had been approved, but admonished us that should we decide to return to VA, we had to notify the state.

Every state with a state income tax likely has a similar procedure. Interestingly, if you move from VA to another state, they still TRY to hold onto you if you have any ties. In the past, failure to cancel a library card was considered a "tie".

Were I you, I would start researching what you need to do. California may not pursue you, but you never know. Good luck.
Married December 1992 (my 'old flame' whom I first met in the mid-70s)
1st move to UK - 1993 (Letter of Consent granted at British Embassy in Washington DC)
ILR - 1994 (1 year later - no fee way back then!)
Back to US in 2000
Returned to UK July 2011 (Spousal Visa/KOL endorsement)
ILR - September 2011
Application for naturalization submitted July 2014
Approval received 15-10-14; ceremony scheduled for 10 November!
Passport arrived 25 November 2014. Finally done!


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Re: Absentee voting question
« Reply #4 on: January 08, 2020, 11:40:53 AM »
Thank you so much for laying it out there. This is incredibly useful information!


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