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EU_Citizen is a paranoid nutjob with a penchant for exaggeration and a desire to be a keen fisherman. He makes Oliver Stone seem sane.
For EUcitizens getting a passport is quite straightforward, you fill in the form, get your picture taken in a photo booth and simply post both to the passport office.
It was the European Councils (the meeting of EU prime ministers) at Thessaloniki in June 2003 and later in Brussels on 12 December 2003 who formally endorsed the proposal.
This measure, together with many others in the pipeline at EU and national level, are geared to creating a society where everyone's movements and communications (by phone and e-mail) are subject to surveillance, where everyone is a "suspect".
It is largely coterminous with nationality, although it is possible to have a nationality without being a citizen (i.e., be legally subject to a state and entitled to its protection without having rights of political participation in it); it is also possible to have political rights without being a national of a state.
EU member states also use a common passport design, burgundy coloured, with the name of the member state, national seal, and the title "European Union" (or its translation), and most also use a common format for their driving licences in order to simplify their use within the whole EU.
In some Commonwealth countries resident citizens of other Commonwealth countries are entitled to political rights, e.g., the right to vote in local and national elections and in some cases even the right to stand for election.