Hello everyone,
As an expat, your day-to-day life in Morocco is impacted by decision-making at the political level in your host country as well as in your country of origin. We would like to know how involved you think expats should be in the political day-to-day of either their host or home country.
To which extent should political life in Morocco include expats and their concerns? Should they be more active as a community to make their voices heard?
Are there any precautionary measures to observe during election period in your host country? Any local prohibitions?
Do you keep up with politics in Morocco?
Thanks for sharing your experience.
Bhavna
Part of this topic is irresponsible, dangerous and short-sighted.
As an expat we are not supposed to get involved in the politics of our host country. We are guests in this country.
We pay our Property Tax and Community Tax because we benefits from the services provided by the local Government and Municipality, but we are forever guests. Not Citizens, and not Immigrant.
The day when citizens of more developed countries could move to less develop countries and start pontificating is over. A foreign citizen getting involved in local politics is exactly that: Pontificating and patronising.
* żriate: Someone who lives outside of their native country; Or a person who lives in a foreign country (Merriam-Webster Definition)
* Immigrant: Someone who comes to live permanently in another country with the intention to seek Citizenship from the host country
Once an expat decided to take the path of citizenship - like an immigrant - it’s a totally different story.
OR
If one is a multinational corporation providing good employment - not just mere exploitative jobs - to thousand of citizens of the host country, then one should possibly be allowed to get involved in the local politics.
As a U.S. citizen from New York, I have met hundreds of expats in Manhattan; British, Canadian, French, Belgian, Swiss, Brazilian, Argentinian, etc. you name it. None of them are eligible to vote or can directly involved in politics, either in the State or Federal level. And they should not, because they are not citizen of the U.S.A. So why suddenly when we live abroad we think we should be able to get involved in the local politics? That is a self-entitlement of epic proportion, typical of a colonist’s attitude.
An Immigrant with a Residency Card - on the path to Citizenship - has more right to get involved in local politics than an expat on any given day.