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How does 5 years complete in Feb when he has not been in the UK on the EEA route for 5 years?Jellybean105 wrote:My husband currently has a 5 year EU family permit through the SS route, its valid till Dec 2019 but 5 years complete in Feb. Do you think he will be able to acquire PR through transitional arrangements?
If not, what would be the process after his current family permit?
If we are still in the EEA (Norwegian or Liechtensteinian model) in February 2019, he will still get it by the current rules. If we leave the EEA, I don't know, for negotiated transitional arrangements will be designed to protect EEA citizens in the UK, and you and your husband won't be EEA citizens.Jellybean105 wrote:My husband currently has a 5 year EU family permit through the SS route, its valid till Dec 2019 but 5 years complete in Feb. Do you think he will be able to acquire PR through transitional arrangements?
If not, what would be the process after his current family permit?
I assumed you were British. If you're British and the UK leaves the EEA, you won't be an EEA citizen. Why should the EU negotiate to protects the rights of British citizens in the UK? Whether any transitional arrangements cover you will be quite random. As the Home Office have no love for users of the SS route and you are not explicitly covered in Directive 2004/38/EC ('SS rights apply by analogy'), you could very easily be overlooked or deliberately left out.Jellybean105 wrote:Sorry, I'm just a little confused. Would I not be considered an EEA citizen? The family permit says Residence card of a Family Member of an EEA National.
The OP is indeed a British Citizen.Richard W wrote:I assumed you were British. If you're British and the UK leaves the EEA, you won't be an EEA citizen. Why should the EU negotiate to protects the rights of British citizens in the UK? Whether any transitional arrangements cover you will be quite random. As the Home Office have no love for users of the SS route and you are not explicitly covered in Directive 2004/38/EC ('SS rights apply by analogy'), you could very easily be overlooked or deliberately left out.Jellybean105 wrote:Sorry, I'm just a little confused. Would I not be considered an EEA citizen? The family permit says Residence card of a Family Member of an EEA National.
I would like to differ with above. If the transitional arrangements are meant for EU nationals in the UK, then the same should be applicable for the family members of British citizen who are deemed to be EU national(SS category). It just doesn't make sense. At the end of the day the family member of EU national and the family member of SS based british citizen would have the same passport stamp i.e EEA2. So as long as the rules for permanent residence card doesnt change for the former, the latter should be fine. In my opinion the threshold is to have atleast EEA 2 residence card before article 50 gets concluded. That should be considered safe enough.Richard W wrote:I assumed you were British. If you're British and the UK leaves the EEA, you won't be an EEA citizen. Why should the EU negotiate to protects the rights of British citizens in the UK? Whether any transitional arrangements cover you will be quite random. As the Home Office have no love for users of the SS route and you are not explicitly covered in Directive 2004/38/EC ('SS rights apply by analogy'), you could very easily be overlooked or deliberately left out.Jellybean105 wrote:Sorry, I'm just a little confused. Would I not be considered an EEA citizen? The family permit says Residence card of a Family Member of an EEA National.
I believe S.Sers should be fine as long as they hold EEA2.gillacious_505 wrote:I would like to differ with above. If the transitional arrangements are meant for EU nationals in the UK, then the same should be applicable for the family members of British citizen who are deemed to be EU national(SS category). It just doesn't make sense. At the end of the day the family member of EU national and the family member of SS based british citizen would have the same passport stamp i.e EEA2. So as long as the rules for permanent residence card doesnt change for the former, the latter should be fine. In my opinion the threshold is to have atleast EEA 2 residence card before article 50 gets concluded. That should be considered safe enough.Richard W wrote:I assumed you were British. If you're British and the UK leaves the EEA, you won't be an EEA citizen. Why should the EU negotiate to protects the rights of British citizens in the UK? Whether any transitional arrangements cover you will be quite random. As the Home Office have no love for users of the SS route and you are not explicitly covered in Directive 2004/38/EC ('SS rights apply by analogy'), you could very easily be overlooked or deliberately left out.Jellybean105 wrote:Sorry, I'm just a little confused. Would I not be considered an EEA citizen? The family permit says Residence card of a Family Member of an EEA National.
Could these be elaborated on? How does Article 50 interact with the ECHR?Obie wrote:After Article 50 is invoked, which unfortunately is unlikely to happen anytime soon, other provision of ECHR may come into play, which will enable you to stay.
The premise of your question or understanding or reading of my post is inconsistent with my post,which unfortunately did not suggest a link between Article 50, and ECHR, so it is not sensible to drag it that far.secret.simon wrote:Could these be elaborated on? How does Article 50 interact with the ECHR?Obie wrote:After Article 50 is invoked, which unfortunately is unlikely to happen anytime soon, other provision of ECHR may come into play, which will enable you to stay.
Yes, after invoking Article 50, then during the 2 years free movement should be unaffected.gillacious_505 wrote:The main ambiguity is what is the current status of the freedom of movement 'during' Article 50 period. It will take 2 years minimum to withdraw from the EU. So does that means during this period of 2 years the status quo of free movement remains? If so, then I guess Surinder SIngh can still be exercised in these 2 years.
Hopefully, that will be the case. But then what will happen to all current EEA2 holders & those who get it in the next 2 years who won't be able to apply for PR in time?CR001 wrote:Yes, after invoking Article 50, then during the 2 years free movement should be unaffected.gillacious_505 wrote:The main ambiguity is what is the current status of the freedom of movement 'during' Article 50 period. It will take 2 years minimum to withdraw from the EU. So does that means during this period of 2 years the status quo of free movement remains? If so, then I guess Surinder SIngh can still be exercised in these 2 years.
None of us know. This will likely be part of the many discussions in parliament/government in the coming months and the negotiations with Brussels.Jellybean105 wrote:Hopefully, that will be the case. But then what will happen to all current EEA2 holders & those who get it in the next 2 years who won't be able to apply for PR in time?CR001 wrote:Yes, after invoking Article 50, then during the 2 years free movement should be unaffected.gillacious_505 wrote:The main ambiguity is what is the current status of the freedom of movement 'during' Article 50 period. It will take 2 years minimum to withdraw from the EU. So does that means during this period of 2 years the status quo of free movement remains? If so, then I guess Surinder SIngh can still be exercised in these 2 years.
The UK has implemented retroactive changes concerning settlement before (admittedly with mixed success), and they might decide, or be forced, to do so again. And I don't think there is anything at all about this contingency in the EEA agreement. If there were, somebody surely would have just quoted that section by now and this thread of discussion would have ended right then and there.gillacious_505 wrote:I am pretty assure the future of EEA2 holders would be safeguarded because the criteria for the settlement of EEA2 cannot be changed retrospectively.
My wife is now a British citizen, but before that it was never the case I could go living in her country, Turkey, with no restrictions, they wouldn't give me a work permit even with a solid offer by a multinational in place.ouflak1 wrote:This argument has already been made and failed. The counter argument being that the UK citizen can always go live with their spouse in the spouse's country with no restriction.mkhan2525 wrote:I’m sure their entry would be covered under Article 8. This is likely to be the view of the ECJ as the UK will not be withdrawing from the Human Rights Act.
Not clear why it is expected that people can go 'anywhere' and have unfettered free access to 'everything' in that country without restriction;aledeniz wrote:My wife is now a British citizen, but before that it was never the case I could go living in her country, Turkey, with no restrictions, they wouldn't give me a work permit even with a solid offer by a multinational in place.
Yep, we used to have the principle - a wife could live with her husband in his country in much of the world.noajthan wrote:Anything else requires a collectively agreed. collaborative approach between a grouping of countries - sound familiar?
You do not have a human right to work. That's a country-by-country thing. The UK is exceptional in its generosity on this point concerning spouses, and even here there many notable restrictions. When I said 'no restriction', I meant that the UK is not restricting you from being with your spouse in their country. Hence their is no valid Human Rights claim. I did not mean that the spouse's country would allow you in with no restrictions.aledeniz wrote:My wife is now a British citizen, but before that it was never the case I could go living in her country, Turkey, with no restrictions, they wouldn't give me a work permit even with a solid offer by a multinational in place.ouflak1 wrote:This argument has already been made and failed. The counter argument being that the UK citizen can always go live with their spouse in the spouse's country with no restriction.mkhan2525 wrote:I’m sure their entry would be covered under Article 8. This is likely to be the view of the ECJ as the UK will not be withdrawing from the Human Rights Act.