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EUSmiles - you really should be careful about advising people when you (as you freely admit) 'are not sure on the details'EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Let’s explore the marriage-to-Brit route as suggested by EUsmiles. It is easier and shorter after all, so why not.
After all, there is Chapter 4 / 4.15 which says EU spouses of Brits have this possibility so why not?
I cannot find a form on the Home Office I can use; the form-finder sends me to forms such as SET (!) which explicitly say are not to be used by Europeans.
Doormice,
The form is the AN form. I have not had time to go through it in detail, but I don't see where you get the impression that it cannot be completed by EEA nationals. Note that where it talks about EEA national exercising treaty rights, ignore this. Imagine someone that's simply lived with their UK spouse, never worked, was never a qualified person...as far as I can see these people could still qualify under the spouse route, but not under the EEA route. Does that make sense to you?
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/briti ... alisation/
If a EEA national wants to apply for ILR (under the immigrations rules), he can apply as any other non-EU national. There are no restrictions preventing a EEA national asking to be treated as a non-EEA.dormice wrote:Greenie, this is how I read things too. Form AN can be completed only after obtaining proof of freedom from immigration restrictions (PR or ILR). What I was looking for is the form to use as a EEA spouse of a British citizen in order to get ILR.
THEN, having obtained ILR, I would be able to submit form AN.
So the question is, how can an EEA apply for ILR?
By the way, UKBA have already replied to my mail, but the answer is a non-event: simply an enormous e-mail with most of the (generic) information on the UKBA site copy-pasted in, and not even information related to my circumstances, just a catch-all email full of blah blah blah. There is no answer to my question; just a comment before the blah blah blah starts suggesting I can find an answer using the ‘search’ facility on the UKBA website. Well I’m damned if I can…
you don 't qualify for ILR as a spouse because you don't have a spouse visa - the fact that you don't need one to live in the UK is irrelevent. As per my previous post, if you want to go down the immigration rules route, in order to qualify for ILR as the spouse of a British Citizen, you would need to leave the UK and apply for limited leave to enter the UK as the spouse of a British citizen (spouse visa), which would be granted for 2 years, and after the two years, you could then apply for ILR.dormice wrote:I don't hold a 'spouse visa', never had (I'm EEA, we don't have to).
Can you please point me to the actual ILR form?
EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Having now had a chance to read the AN guidance in full, I can see that an EEA national cannot use three years' marriage as a basis for naturalisation. Plan B as I was referring to is not an option. I was a little surprised that a British citizen would be treated differently depending on where they come from.
To qualify for permanent residence as the 2006 regulations are written in general, one needs to be a qualified person for five years or be a family member of such a person.
If one refers to the directive itself, it talks about 5-years' legal residence (the regulations say five years in accordance with these regulations). As the spouse of a UK citizen, you will have achieved 5-years legal residence in the UK irrespective of whether you had CSI or not. Nobody could suggest that you were living in the UK with your spouse unlawfully.
Imagine a French couple; the husband works full-time for five years and his wife is a homemaker. Both qualify under the regulations for PR.
Why would the spouse of a UK citizen, who by definition has a right of permanent residence from birth be treated differently from the example above?
BTW, I've just checked and see that you married in 2008, but nonetheless I would not suggest that any of your time in the UK was not lawful.
Sorry about the confusion earlier and I hope the above helps. Check it all out for yourself and don't take my word for it!
Not completely true - an EEA national married to a British Citizen can apply for naturalisation on the basis of 3 years residence and marriage to a British Citizen but he or she must be free from immigration restrictions on the date of applicationHaving now had a chance to read the AN guidance in full, I can see that an EEA national cannot use three years' marriage as a basis for naturalisation
.As the spouse of a UK citizen, you will have achieved 5-years legal residence in the UK irrespective of whether you had CSI or not. Nobody could suggest that you were living in the UK with your spouse unlawfully
A British Citizen who has not exercised treaty rights outside the UK cannot make use of the EEA regulations, he is not exercising treaty rights, he is in the UK as a British Citizen. Therefore the fact that he is British and working cannot be relied upon by the OP to say that she is exercising treaty rights as the family member of an EEA worker.Imagine a French couple; the husband works full-time for five years and his wife is a homemaker. Both qualify under the regulations for PR.
Why would the spouse of a UK citizen, who by definition has a right of permanent residence from birth be treated differently from the example above?
I have positively explained to the OP that she should pursue her EEA3 application.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Greenie, have you anything positive to add to this? I was not correct about the OP being able to naturalise on the basis of her marriage and have apologised for that.
The fact is that the directive states "Union citizens who have resided legally for a continuous period of five years in the host Member State shall have the right of permanent residence there." The EEA regulations say "an EEA national who has resided in the United Kingdom in accordance with these Regulations for a continuous period of five years" There is a difference between them. The regulations appear to make it more onerous than the wording in the directive.
Was the OP residing legally in the UK for five years or not? If yes, she qualifies for PR, if not, she doesn't.
The point I was trying to make earlier was imagine the EU spouse of a British citizen who does not exercise any independent treaty rights (by that I mean that they are not a worker, a job-seeker, a self-sufficient person because they don't have CSI, etc, etc). There does not appear to be any way for them to qualify for PR under the regulations, even if their UK spouse was a qualified person throughout.
Does this make sense to you or not?