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joshuaes wrote:I am already aware of my rights as a EEA national, just wanted to speed up a visa with settled status and then naturalisation.
Thanks
So it will be some time yet before you can apply for naturalisation.joshuaes wrote:I have only been living in the uk for about a year.
Bank accounts, employment records, education records, utility bills, council tax etc etc.How does one go about proving length of residency? I am assuming they look at things like bank accounts and such.
Usually they want to see a copy of all pages of any passport you have held over the residence qualification period. They will normally accept certified copies instead of originals.I now have more than one passport. For examination of stay will they look at all of them??? Will it be easier to get around the travel restrictions?? I am not sure how or if any of this will effect my application when I go to apply for naturalisation.
Thanks
Out of interest why do you want to naturalise as a UK citizen ? As an Irish citizen you already have all the rights a UK citizen has in the UK and Europe.joshuaes wrote:I have recently acquired Irish citizenship (through descent) and was wondering if it accorded any special rights in naturalising to the UK?? I am uncertain, but I believe I read somewhere that I now have de facto right of abode in the UK and that this allows me to apply for a residence permit with settled status without having to wait ??? I am still required to wait the five years before applying for naturalisation???
Thanks
lemess wrote: Out of interest why do you want to naturalise as a UK citizen ? As an Irish citizen you already have all the rights a UK citizen has in the UK and Europe.
lemess wrote:With respect JAJ, having a home somewhere does not equate to feeling the urge to naturalise especially in this day and age.
The Home Office has done some research on this, in the publication "Persons Granted British Citizenship"Of course it can be a symbolic gesture but within free movement areas such as the EU and the CTA I wonder how many people from other nationalities who have the right to freely live and work here feel the time and expense that would be involved in going through a naturalisation process worthwhile if there are no tangible associated benefits ( apart from the symbolic one) ?
I would submit only a minority
Some people do. And others are unhappy at being foreigners in their adopted country.People live happily in countries other than their own without feeling the need to become citizens.
Not in all cases. Some people feel neutral towards their country of birth, others actively dislike it for a variety of reasons.The country of birth is always part of someone's identity.
The decision to naturalise as a citizen of another country is usually made when there are some clear associated benefits - beyond the merely symbolic.
At least that is my experience.
A polite question is not a 'challenge'. No one is demanding that the OP justify his decision to anyone - I am just curious about the issues which make an Irish citizen want to naturalise in the UK. I know loads of Irish people who work in the Uk and they all retain irish citizenship so that prompted the question. Frankly the question was addressed to him and I would be interested to hear what his reasons are.JAJ wrote:
Maybe not for some but those who do want to naturalise should not be challenged as to why they want to.
Perhaps my reaction was overly strong, if so I apologise. However it seems to be a regular question directed towards Irish or other EEA nationals thinking of taking out British citizenship as to "why" they want to do so.lemess wrote:[A polite question is not a 'challenge'. No one is demanding that the OP justify his decision to anyone - I am just curious about the issues which make an Irish citizen want to naturalise in the UK. I know loads of Irish people who work in the Uk and they all retain irish citizenship so that prompted the question. Frankly the question was addressed to him and I would be interested to hear what his reasons are.
This is an immigration board and if someone posts their circumstances looking for advice I don't see why someone shouldn't politely inquire abut their reasons for making what would appear to be an unusual choice. I think you're reading far more into a simple, straightforward question than is necessary.
But whether she should use EU law is another question. Husband will get permanent residence more quickly if they use domestic U.K. immigration law.VictoriaS wrote:Irish nationals in the UK actually have MORE rights than UK nationals - which is why I am doing the same thing that your wife is doing, and registering as an Irish National born overseas, even though I am British.
To answer your questions, no, it makes no difference if she was born outside of Ireland, or has never even set foot in Ireland. She is an Irish nationa, that means that she can use EU law.
In face the cut-off date is 1 January 1949, but if the only claim to British nationality is through birth in what is now the the Republic of Ireland the person only gets a British subject passport, which means a lot of travel problems.British passports are not given to Irish citizens as a matter of course. They have to have to have been born in Ireland before 1922
Absolutely. But if, for example, the couple could not meet the support and accommodation aspects of the Immigration Rules, going the EEA route would be a good idea.JAJ wrote:
But whether she should use EU law is another question. Husband will get permanent residence more quickly if they use domestic U.K. immigration law.
Not really. Basically the EEA route is simpler and quicker (and free, up to and including permanent residence), but you wait a longer time to get permanent residence.rnc312 wrote:Thank you. I really appreciate your helpful responses!
Is there a good online resource that can help me compare the specifics of domestic UK immigartion law with an EEA/EU national's rights?
Irish citizens are automatically considered to be "settled" in the United Kingdom (if living in the U.K.) and hence most children born in the U.K. with an Irish citizen parent are automatically British citizens.rnc312 wrote:We have a four-year-old son right now, but we don't have any current plans for another child at the moment. If we change our minds, it sounds like our British-born child would become a British citizen, correct?
Since my wife will have her Irish/U.S. citizenship and I am non-EEA (American) how will our son become a British citizen under EU law (or UK domestic law)?
If you choose the U.K. domestic spouse visa route the pathway is as follows:rnc312 wrote:Okay, so to become a naturalized citizen I would have to work and reside in Britain for five consecutive years, then file an application for UK citizenship? And, my son would become a British citizen as result of my successful naturalizaton. That seems too easy! Am I missing something?
Lastly, not to sound paranoid, but are there any specific reasons the British goverment might decide to deport us -- outside of being convicted of a crime, of course -- despite my wife having Indefinite Leave to Remain?
That statement, which refers to section 1(3) of the British Nationality Act, deals only with children born in the United Kingdom, Isle of Man or Channel Islands.rnc312 wrote:"Non-British children with an EEA/Swiss parent may be registered as British once the parent becomes "settled" in the United Kingdom under the terms of the Immigration Regulations dealing with EEA citizens."
Not sure of the accuracy of this statement I found on Wikipedia about British nationality law. If this is true, however, would my Irish national wife's settled status in the UK allow her to register our son as a British citizen prior to meeting the five-year residency requirement? Just thought I'd give it a shot ...