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I will disagree with this one...acme4242 wrote: The Italians, Spaniards, Romanians and Belgians all treat their own
citizens equal to other EU citizens. The Irish don't.
If you want you read Irish Law, read what the minister for justice saidThis Embassy fails to understand the exact reasons why the INIS issues all other EU national's non EU family members with Stamp 4EuFam GNIB cards but fails to issue its own Irish non EU family members with the same Stamp 4EuFam cards. This would facilitate them with the exemption of all visas to visit Italy or the Schengen area,... But as things stand now all non Eu spouses of Irish citizens need visas to visit the rest of the schengen area every time they travel to Italy
Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform (Deputy Dermot Ahern): Marriage to an Irish national does not confer any automatic right to enter to reside in the State solely on that basis.
If you have a British Birth Cert, you can get a British passport.I was born in the uk, so can I get a UK passport
There is no good reason I, as an individual politician, would seek to
put barriers in the way of genuine spouses of Irish citizens gaining
citizenship. To do so would be an act of lunacy. I am trying to close
off the potential for abuse which has been recognised by the
Departments of Justice, Equality and Law Reform and Foreign Affairs
over a number of years. I am not trying to put obstacles in anyone's
way. The termination of the post-nuptial citizenship scheme will not
adversely affect the position of non-national spouses in terms of
their joining their spouses in the State, nor will it adversely affect
their right to work.
Your better off being British, or have another EU citizenship.Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform (Deputy Dermot Ahern):
Marriage to an Irish national does not confer any automatic right to enter to reside in the State solely on that basis.