jenangeles wrote:You're making this more complicated than it has to be - as vinny said, the EEA FP has never been a prerequisite to applying for a RC. End of discussion. The Mccarthy ruling only deals with non EU nationals, who normally require a visa to visit the UK, visiting the UK with their UK/EU citizen partners.
you're probably right, but I'm thinking the difficult, as well as trying to think outside the box. For this discussion lets ignore Mrs McCarthy from Columbia who would normally require a visa to visit the UK.
I'm trying to get my head around why the non EU spouse with an RC from a member state
would need to have a visa of any kind including the 'family permit' to reside in the UK?
1. I understand the point that there are those non EU nationals do not require a visa to visit the UK.
For those people, that have a RC card from that member state (lets say Malta) and who are living as their centre of life with their Brit spouse in a member state , why would they need any visa to reside in the UK once they have an RC card from a member state?
2. Can the non EU spouse (accompanying their Brit spouse) simply begin residing in the UK indefinitely with just the RC card from a member state without having a family permit?
3. And can they just go to the Job Centre with RC card from the member state & apply for an NI card, tax number, NHS card
Why would someone with a RC card from a member state be refused any of the points in 2 &3 above?
If I'm totally missing the point, can someone walk me through it
BTW, as of January 30, the residence card application form - 'new version' has changed to 139 pager from the 38 pager that was on the UKVI site last week
I am wondering from the post below in another thread how this individual made out? Is the non EU spouse illegal in the UK without a visa? Can that spouse reside without a UK visa?
n2o wrote:jasmin kool wrote:i have got 5 years residence card in Ireland which is called stamp 4 eufam.the visa which i didn't apply is family permit which is to come to uk i travel to uk without family permit and airline was flybee.if you want to make surinder singh route you must apply for residence card in ireland and exercise treaty rights once you got residence card in ireland and you have got enough evidence to proof your partner moves his or her center of life in ireland than you travel to uk and apply for EEA2 straight away
jasmin kool wrote:No I didn't apply for EEA permit.me and my wife both travel to belfast as there is no border between ireland and uk and then fly from belfast city airport to Manchester. And then after 2 days I submit my EEA2 application