Can a Caymanian status holder stand for election? There are many resident expatriates and they really should have a voice in the LA. In the UK there are a large number of MPs of various ethnic origin reflecting the racial background of the voters.


Auntie’s answer: Once more, the very prompt and helpful Elections Office has come through. Not surprising, there is more to the answer than a simple yes or no.

An election official said the issue was a “very complex one, as can be garnered by the legal arguments that were before the Grand Court in relation to the publication/disqualification of candidates”.

He added, “Also complicating the answer is that the issuance of ‘Caymanian status’, or more accurately ‘the right to be Caymanian’, also applies to children of Caymanian parents who are born overseas.”

Nevertheless, the short answer is, “A person born outside the Cayman Islands and acquired the right to be Caymanian, whose parents or grandparents were not Caymanian, does not qualify for nomination as a MLA.”

If you would like more details, look to Section 61 of the Cayman Islands Constitution, which begins with “…a person shall be qualified to be elected as a member of the Legislative Assembly if, and shall not be qualified to be so elected unless…(e) he or she was born in the Cayman Islands, or was born outside the Cayman Islands in the circumstances mentioned in subsection (2)(b)”. Other caveats follow about residing in Cayman not fewer than seven years and the maximum number of allowable days (400) absent during that period.

If you are still with me, Subsection (2)(b) refers to a qualified citizen who “was born outside the Cayman Islands, has or had at least one parent or grandparent who was born in the Cayman Islands and is a Caymanian (or if deceased would if alive have been a Caymanian at the date of nomination for election), and who at the date of his or her nomination for election possesses no other citizenship save for any right he or she may have to some other citizenship by virtue of his or her birth outside the Cayman Islands; and in this subsection the words ‘other citizenship’ do not include British citizenship acquired by virtue of the British Overseas Territories Act 2002(3)”.

I realise that is a lot to absorb, but I think it covers everything, and hope it thoroughly answers your question.

The document mentioned in this column can be found on the CNS Library