Sir Patrick Stewart is applying for US citizenship so he can protest against President Donald Trump.
The British actor – who has lived in America for several years – is strongly opposed to the viewpoints of the new commander-in-chief but understands he can’t make his voice heard in any significant way unless he undergoes the process to be recognised as a legal member of the country and plans to do so in order to "fight and oppose" the Republican regime.
Asked on ‘The View’ about a "fairly innocent" tweet he posted last month while staying in Washington D.C. – in which he stated he had the "worst sleep" he’d had but was "less than 300yds" from where the President sleeps – he said: "I did not directly insult your president."
Co-host Whoopi Goldberg interrupted to say: "Not mine."
The 76-year-old actor replied: "He’s not mine either. We have our own problems. We have Brexit.
"I’m not a citizen. However, there is, maybe it’s the only good thing as the result of this election: I am now applying for citizenship because I want to be an American too, because all of my friends in Washington said, ‘There is one thing you can do. Fight, fight, oppose, oppose.’ But I can’t do it because I’m not a citizen."
The ‘Logan’ star – who has two children from his first marriage and wed third spouse Sunny Ozell in 2013 – likes to make fun of himself on social media but also sees it as a platform for making "serious" statements and has no desire to stop using Twitter any time soon.
He told The Rake magazine: "Of course, there is an individual in the United States who is giving Twitter a very bad name, but I think it would be a narrow-minded point of view to stop because of that.
"What I do on social media — a lot of which is with the support and advice of my wife, who has a much more intensive and surefooted way of understanding social media than I have — is meant for humour and for storytelling, and occasionally for making statements that are serious and on which we hope to have an impact."