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" Permanent residence status under EU lawalterhase58 wrote:Those with current PR have to re-apply:
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/status-of-e ... -in-the-uk
He also opines that "It is wrong to conclude that the weakness of Theresa May’s minority government, and especially her difficulties negotiating a deal with the Northern Irish DUP, would have a huge impact on Brexit. The reason is that the parliamentary majority in favour of Brexit is now overwhelming."The offer, and what it says about the state of Brexit wrote:The EU’s red line in the negotiations is the protection of the rights of people who are residing in the UK now. The UK’s red line is sovereign jurisdiction. This is not really a hard issue to compromise on. A roomful of immigration lawyers could do this in a weekend. We assume that the UK will accept the EU demands on the important small print issues, while the EU gives up the demand of oversight by the ECJ.
That is bloody ridiculous. I hope I can go for citizenship before I have to apply for this new document. I am sick of Theresa May!alterhase58 wrote:Those with current PR have to re-apply:
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/status-of-e ... -in-the-uk
When a BC returns from a another members state after exercising treaty rights the Directive applies by anology. I would expect SS family members to be given the same opportunity as EU nationals and their family members to acquire 5 years of residence before applying for the new ILR status providing they arrive before the cut off date.Coconutlatte wrote:I've read everything but I'm still a little baffled...!
My husband and I arrived in the UK (I'm British and he is non-EU) after working and living in Ireland so we went through the SS route. He recieved his residence card ('Family Member/EU resident) this year. Valid for 5 years. But obviously we went through SS and I had triggered my freedom of movement as an EU citizen etc. I just...I don't know what we are meant to do next now? Or can he stay for the 5 years stated and then apply for settled status instead of PR which would have been next?
Some of them found £65 per application extortionate.mkhan2525 wrote:I wonder if EU nationals and their family members will have to endure the extortionate ILR fees non-eu nationals are subject to when applying for ILR.
10 year Long Residence (assuming that they reside in the UK for 10 years)? Nothing for those with shorter terms of residence. But worth remembering that they did not get PR under EU law either. So, no effective change.mkhan2525 wrote: The most vulnerable group of people will be those living in the UK under Zambrano rights of residence. These group of people have no legitimate expectation to aquire ILR.
You will likely become a British citizen before UK withdraw from EU. So the special settled status is irrelevant to you. According to their proposal so far, no one will have to apply for the 'settled status' before UK withdraw from EU, it's for arrangement afterwards.eeapr4me wrote:hi all, any idea what might/could happen in my situation:
eu national applied for DCPR in July 2016
DCPR issued in Nov. 2016
Permanent residence deemed to have been acquired 5 April 2016.
Applied for naturalisation in April 2017 and currently waiting for a decision.
I appreciate that this situation is fluid but would be interested in your opinions on the implication of having to re-apply to confirm settled status as this is a requirement for naturalisation.
thank you
ILR4PVM wrote:" Permanent residence status under EU lawalterhase58 wrote:Those with current PR have to re-apply:
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/status-of-e ... -in-the-uk
The settled status application process for EU citizens will be separate from the current one for documents confirming EU permanent residence status. Permanent residence status is linked to the UK’s membership of the EU and so will no longer be valid after we leave.
If you already have a document certifying permanent residence, you will still need to apply for the new settled status document. The application process for people who need to do this will be as streamlined as possible."
No, it is not a good thing. The EU offer is to keep the existing EU legislation in place - to treat British Citizens exercising their freedom of movement like European Citizen. The UK proposal is much weaker, and therefore a reciprocal arrangement would have to be weaker than the current EU proposal.UKBALoveStory wrote:Although she has offered nothing new but her conditional offer is a good thing imho. She wants the same reciprocal rights for the British citizens living in EU - which surely is good thing. No?
EU nationals had better hope that this guide is appallingly drafted. It saysalterhase58 wrote:Those with current PR have to re-apply:
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/status-of-e ... -in-the-uk
Given the enormous estimates (decades!) of how long it will take for all EU citizens in the UK to get their current permanent residence documented, this means that 'permanent residents' whose applications aren't processed in time will be here illegally! This is so contrary to the usual rules on government delays that one can only hope the statement is an unintentional error as opposed to a massive suspension of 'fair play'.The grace period will last for a fixed period of time (to be confirmed during negotiations) of up to 2 years. If you haven’t received a document confirming your new immigration status by the end of this period you will no longer have permission to remain in the UK.
Yes - nothing has changed - UK is still in the EU and your PR is valid.anmil20 wrote:Are we still ok to apply for citizenship with the EEA PR cards? I have my NCS appointment in July.
The rights of Irish citizens in the U.K. (and vice versa for British citizens in Ireland) are based on the Common Travel Area not the Ireland Act. It is open to either the British or Irish governments to change their domestic legislation but that does not occur as a consequence of leaving the EU.Richard W wrote: The Irish may be conned, as the Ireland Act 1949 gives Irish citizens no more rights than Australians. Fortunately for them, they should generally be able to recover matters by entry to the UK via the Republic.
By all means, write to your MEPs and other EU politicians, especially Michel Barnier. But keep a few things in mind.memuk wrote:Today's Policy Paper is bad news. The vagueness is a trick. The mere idea that EVERY EU national in the UK needs to "re-apply" means they intend to get rid of many of us. They want self deportation. The FEES will be huge. The timeline and endless bureaucracy will effectively scare people away. UK businesses will be afraid to hire EUs. This isn't hard Brexit. It's evil Brexit. Don't be fooled by anything else in the document. Making everyone reapply is designed create a giant mess.
Please write to your EU reps, your MEPs, or other politicians to ask for these changes
During your recent absence, Richard W has delved at some length into the special status of Irish citizens in the UK (see his post history) and has tried to find the legislative basis for it. However, we could not find any definitive basis for it apart from the Ireland Act 1949 and some sections of the Immigration Act 1971. It seems to be based on practice rather than legislation. Can you elucidate further on this topic, perhaps in another thread?JAJ wrote:The rights of Irish citizens in the U.K. (and vice versa for British citizens in Ireland) are based on the Common Travel Area not the Ireland Act. It is open to either the British or Irish governments to change their domestic legislation but that does not occur as a consequence of leaving the EU.Richard W wrote:The Irish may be conned, as the Ireland Act 1949 gives Irish citizens no more rights than Australians. Fortunately for them, they should generally be able to recover matters by entry to the UK via the Republic.
The Document released yesterday by the UK Government refers to the CTA.secret.simon wrote:During your recent absence, Richard W has delved at some length into the special status of Irish citizens in the UK (see his post history) and has tried to find the legislative basis for it. However, we could not find any definitive basis for it apart from the Ireland Act 1949 and some sections of the Immigration Act 1971. It seems to be based on practice rather than legislation. Can you elucidate further on this topic, perhaps in another thread?JAJ wrote:The rights of Irish citizens in the U.K. (and vice versa for British citizens in Ireland) are based on the Common Travel Area not the Ireland Act. It is open to either the British or Irish governments to change their domestic legislation but that does not occur as a consequence of leaving the EU.Richard W wrote:The Irish may be conned, as the Ireland Act 1949 gives Irish citizens no more rights than Australians. Fortunately for them, they should generally be able to recover matters by entry to the UK via the Republic.
I think you misunderstand the CTA and the rights of Irish citizens in the UK. Irish citizens themselves are covered by domestic legislation regarding the CTA, but crucially it does not cover their non-British and non-Irish family members. Your non-EEA spouse is here because of EU law, not because of domestic UK law as regards the CTA.Salem wrote:But no matter, the CTA insures the Rights of Irish people, which is confirmed again in the document yesterday. Not really understanding where they could be 'conned'.
No, I understand completely how my wife is here, under the EU Directive, that's why i used my Irish Passport, didn't go the UK route.secret.simon wrote:I think you misunderstand the CTA and the rights of Irish citizens in the UK. Irish citizens themselves are covered by domestic legislation regarding the CTA, but crucially it does not cover their non-British and non-Irish family members. Your non-EEA spouse is here because of EU law, not because of domestic UK law as regards the CTA.Salem wrote:But no matter, the CTA insures the Rights of Irish people, which is confirmed again in the document yesterday. Not really understanding where they could be 'conned'.
Furthermore, essentially Irish citizens are treated as settled on arrival for most purposes of domestic UK law due to the CTA. That means that your non-EEA family members would only be able to come to the UK as family members of people settled in the UK. As the non-EEA spouse of an Irish citizen in the UK, she would have been subject to the same requirements as that required of the non-EEA spouse of a British citizen, if it were not for EU law.
Therefore, if she is eligible for PR, I would strongly advise you to apply for the PR card. On its acquisition, as you are a dual British/Irish citizen, she can apply directly for citizenship, likely well before Brexit day.
This is my current understanding.Obie wrote:As a matter of EU law, there is nothing that will preclude Irish national family members from qualifying under Mrs May so call generous offer for Irish Citizens.