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This case dealt with Minor Children. I would wait for the McCarthy case before coming to the same conclusionMonifé wrote:The ruling also means that an Irish citizen can avail of the rights enjoyed by EU law in relation to having their non-EU family members live with them in their own country. No movement to another member state needed.
Do you have any weblink for the McCarthy case. I'm curious to know the background.walrusgumble wrote: This case dealt with Minor Children. I would wait for the McCarthy case before coming to the same conclusion
The judgment did nthing to substantially deal with adults and reverse discrimination, as proposed by the AG.
You should get info from here. It looks like these crowd share the same concerns as me.strongbow wrote:Do you have any weblink for the McCarthy case. I'm curious to know the background.walrusgumble wrote: This case dealt with Minor Children. I would wait for the McCarthy case before coming to the same conclusion
The judgment did nthing to substantially deal with adults and reverse discrimination, as proposed by the AG.
You should get info from here. It looks like these crowd share the same concerns as me. Zambrano is an extensive addition to Chen. Chen was never used or could be used by adults and spousesstrongbow wrote:Do you have any weblink for the McCarthy case. I'm curious to know the background.walrusgumble wrote: This case dealt with Minor Children. I would wait for the McCarthy case before coming to the same conclusion
The judgment did nthing to substantially deal with adults and reverse discrimination, as proposed by the AG.
You should get info from here. It looks like these crowd share the same concerns as me. Zambrano is an extensive addition to Chen. Chen was never used or could be used by adults and spousesstrongbow wrote:Do you have any weblink for the McCarthy case. I'm curious to know the background.walrusgumble wrote: This case dealt with Minor Children. I would wait for the McCarthy case before coming to the same conclusion
The judgment did nthing to substantially deal with adults and reverse discrimination, as proposed by the AG.
Obie wrote:Walrusgrumble, i am not surprised a single bit by your restrictive interpretation of the Zambrano ruling. You say it is an extension of Chen, and that Chen does not apply to adult.
Chen does not apply to adult, and besides why would an adult want to invoke Chen, it is unnecessary. The adult self-sufficiency carries more right to the non-EEA family members of those Union Citizen than Chen.
For example, in the UK, the spouse of a Self-Sufficient EEA national can work, as opposed to the direct ascendant of an EEA child.
If you understand the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, you will understand that it prohibit discrimination on grounds of age, gender, nationality and so on. To say that rights of Union Citizenship applies to child in their memberstate of origin but not adult, will go against the core principle of the treaty.
You say this ruling will make naturalisation or acquisition of citizenship more tougher. Well if i go by you interpretation, this ruling will only apply to EEA national children. As things stands in the Union, no members state confers citizenship to a child born in any of the member state except one or both of their parents are national of the memberstate in question or has settled status. That is the toughest restriction that a memberstate can impose. Any further restriction will breach international law.
Secondly, the "core principles" of the original treaty were not intended to deal with this. THe fancy aspirations did not deal nor does it deal with a mass influx of non eu people coming to Europe. It has changed, obviously to meet with different times by a court. They give serious new changes of law which should be properly addressed by legislation, and also specifically stated in the Treaty
In light of your criticism of Advocate General Sharpton's opinion, and wish for it to be rejected, i cannot help noticing deep seated anger and frustration against this ruling.
Reverse discrimination cannot go on, simple as that. As a union Citizen, i expect you to be apply that you have the same rights in Ireland as a Polish who migrated there, in regards to family reunification rights.
That is not what freemovent of people is suppose to be about. You actually leave to go to another country. The citizenship notion was a huge reason why the Constitution for Europe was rejected as it implied Supernational / Federal Europe ala Amercia. The EU citizenship matter should only be cermonial when it does not apply to areas where the EU does not have contempetence, eg national immigration rules dealing with their own people. The Treaty says EU citizenship does not replace national citizenship, it suppose to supplement it. Well these cases are ignoring this.Obie wrote: Reverse discrimination cannot go on, simple as that. As a union Citizen, i expect you to be apply that you have the same rights in Ireland as a Polish who migrated there, in regards to family reunification rights.
According to Section 6A of the 1956-2004 Act, (assuming neither parents are Irish themselves, with the small exceptions in Section 7) the child will only be an Irish citizen, if at least one of the parents was legally residing in Ireland for at least 3 years before the birth of the child. Legal residence does not include time as an asylum seeker or student. So if the child does not meet that critieria or that the child can not get citizenship via Irish parent / grandparent, then the child is not an Irish citizen and will not be an EU citizen. THe child will have to follow the naturalisation route like others (it will be alot easier if parent naturualises before the child turns 18. then it would only take less than 1 year to process)ostrich wrote:What about the children born in Ireland post 2005 after the IBC ceased
Morrisj wrote:Please Archagbe you should know thats only from the Brophy's Solicitor so they are liable to interpret some words in their own way the correct judgement is given at the link below
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/Lex ... 34:EN:HTML
However Judge John Cooke said some clarifications need to be sent to the Ecj clarifications like if the ruling applies to parents that came to the country illegally but reference should be given that although Mr Zambrano entered the country Belgium legally with a passport ,he sought asylum and was refused and the Ecj was aware of this before the ruling so i really dont know why the Court or the Goverment or the DOj is trying to make their own criterias for allowing such right?
Its an Eu law and its same like the freemovement, the only differences is that it applies to minors who cant exercise their freemovement on their own and in order for them to do this they need the company of both parents.
Therefore since its same like the Eu freemovement the memberstates should know the only ground of refusal should be on public policy ,security and health just as the freemovement.
I just dont think the Irish Goverment understands this because i see no reason why they r trying to come up with criterias which is definitely going to be made from National law/measures
On those grounds, the Court (Grand Chamber) hereby rules:
(Article 20 TFEU is to be interpreted as meaning that it precludes a Member State from refusing a third country national upon whom his minor children, who are European Union citizens, are dependent, a right of residence in the Member State of residence and nationality of those children, and from refusing to grant a work permit to that third country national, in so far as such decisions deprive those children of the genuine enjoyment of the substance of the rights attaching to the status of European Union citizen.)
So with the reference above i dont see how the Doj can manage to bring up their criterias because if they do it means they are breaching up the law again and i feel really sorry for the taxpayers because the Goverment will loose again and again so why wasting time as i said in my previous post the worse they can do is tighten up citizenship thats all
Its really a disgrace that the Irish Government has been a in breach of the Eu law long ago like that of the Metock so its clear to see the rate of beloved not even among the citizens but even from the Government bodies really a shame
so? if the Romanians and Bulgarians requirement work permit ceases? You are trying to be smart by saying non nationals will get more right than them what about the Irish that has been discriminated for long time (other eu citizen have more right than them)?what will u have to say about that?walrusgumble wrote:Could one now assume that the requirement by new childless Romanians and Bulgarians for work permits to reside and work in Ireland will now cease? as failure to do so would mean giving more rights to non eu people with little or no connection with the state, bar planting a child in eu?
so? if the Romanians and Bulgarians requirement work permit ceases? You are trying to be smart by saying non nationals will get more right than them what about the Irish that has been discriminated for long time (other eu citizen have more right than them)?what will u have to say about that?walrusgumble wrote:Could one now assume that the requirement by new childless Romanians and Bulgarians for work permits to reside and work in Ireland will now cease? as failure to do so would mean giving more rights to non eu people with little or no connection with the state, bar planting a child in eu?
As it stands, a Romanian national entering Ireland or the UK for the first time and wishes to reside for more than 3 months, but, can't afford to be self employed or an insured student and would rather work, has less rights than the non eu parent of a minor eu child. Ie THey will have no restriction to a work environment.Morrisj wrote:so? if the Romanians and Bulgarians requirement work permit ceases? You are trying to be smart by saying non nationals will get more right than them what about the Irish that has been discriminated for long time (other eu citizen have more right than them)?what will u have to say about that?walrusgumble wrote:Could one now assume that the requirement by new childless Romanians and Bulgarians for work permits to reside and work in Ireland will now cease? as failure to do so would mean giving more rights to non eu people with little or no connection with the state, bar planting a child in eu?
Precise really don't understand you to be honest i think Obie was right when he said the same thing because to be honest you twist things up,tho I must acknowledge your intelligence regarding the topic but you seem like a complete opponent to this Zambrano Judgement. I was completely wrong when i thought your previous posts were fair but you know what you cant write things in a smart way because of your intelligence.
We both agreed the Judgement was for minors,so why comparing such against the Romanians and Bulgarians when you know the minors wont be able to exercise their rights on their own without their parents?
Its wholly unreasonable to bring the Romanians and Bulgarians to this topic,what ever requirement they are passing through was directly made from the Eu (they were recently added to the EU)so its left for their government to fight that chain off,so this completely has nothing to do with the Romanians and Bulgarians.
For Romanians and Bulgarians that may find this offensive,should be aware its the nitty gritty and am not trying to go against any anybody be you from kafashan America Europe Asia Africa e.t.c i.e i accept everybody irrespective of their place of origin unlike someone here that just have this cunny itch for non eu nationals unbelievable.
Don't blame the Ecj or The Ag for anything wrong,blame the member states who has partial interest for Eu treaty right application,what i mean is,each member state are not happy other eu citizens from another member state comes to their country with their non national spouse to reside thats why they want any of their national who is with their non-spouse to exercise their own eu right to by moving aswell without considering fundamental human rights in national measures and that is REVERSE DISCRIMINATION.
In 1992 there were only 12 member states. Population was not as big. There was absolutely no foresight as to how big the union would get. This notion of EU Citizenship attaching relevance to "interal matters" is only new, well over 10 years after Maastrict (ie circa 2003)Obie wrote:If i remember correctly Walrusgumble, it was not the 27 judges at the CJEU that came up with the concept of Union Citizen in the 1992 Maastricht Treaty. It was the memberstates themselves that came up with it. They defined "Union Citizen" as anyone holding the nationality of a member state, as opposed to anyone who exercise rights of movement in a memberstate other than their own.
Mr & Mrs Zambrano did not win their case on any extension of the freemovement provision. Infact the judgement clearly states that they are not covered by the directive. They won, because their children are Union Citizen, and with that right comes their right under the Charter of Fundamental rights.
This is separate from the Human Rights act, and where as it was soft law prior to Lisbon treaty, it is now not the case.
If a Union Citizen is able to claim rights as Union Citizen in their state of origin, then their rights under the charter can be invoked, without them having to move to another memberstate, as was previously the case.
The charter provides for the right to family life for union citizens.
I fail to see what a huge significance McCarthy will make to this ruling.
It is crystal clear. No need for further guidance Irish Judges. Just accept the judgment, and don't create further delays and misery for Irish Citizens family.
Contrary to whatever views i might have expressed on this ruling previously, i am now of the strong belief that its scope is much wider than i initially thought, and there is little room for misunderstanding.
Any attempt by the Irish authorities to limit the scope of Zambrano, will breach the right of the Union Citizen child under Article 7 & 24(3) on the Charter of Fundamental rights.