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New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

This is the area of this board to discuss the referendum taking place in the UK on 23rd June 2016. Also to discuss the ramifications of the EU-UK deal.

Differing views will be respected. Rudeness to other members will not be welcome.

Moderators: Casa, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, Administrator

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Wanderer
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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by Wanderer » Fri Feb 26, 2016 10:14 am

ryuzaki wrote:
shnooks1 wrote:We haven't found a flat yet so I highly doubt we would be able to apply for the RC in time and it would be a huge risk we aren't willing to make. I just don't understand why I wouldn't be allowed to exercise treaty rights if my EU spouse has never lived in the UK or EU.
Because the UK is full of xenophobic UKIPers and Tory voters who are hell bent on setting some arbitrary figure on immigration numbers as a way of keeping dirty foreigners out.

At this point, I think it's time to abandon ship. The UK has made it clear that it doesn't want its citizens to marry foreigners. Maybe we can claim refugee status in the EU somewhere. Only half kidding. How would a British person claiming asylum on human rights grounds (right to a family) in the EU get on after a Brexit?

The best option seems to be to get out of the UK as quickly as possible, before the referendum. No matter what the result is, you will be better off if you are covered by existing rules than whatever they bring in afterwards.
Think it's more the constant abuse of the rules and the system by migrants that's the real issue behind this tightening up, just look in the Tier 1/2 forums at all the tax fidders who thought they'd got away with it being caught out now.
An chéad stad eile Stáisiún Uí Chonghaile....

robsters
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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by robsters » Fri Feb 26, 2016 3:48 pm

Hello

read most of this thread we were in Dublin and re entered the UK in september last year using the SS route, we claimed for the UK EU residence card and got it by december 2015, my wife also gave birth in uk the same month as well so our new born son is registered british citizen now as well. my question is my wife was given the 5 year residence card now whatever the outcome of the referendum could they take this card away from my wife? my concern is if we have exit vote i fear they will say i need to be earning the 22.5k a year which for me i would fail to meet at this point but looking for the job paying that or more just incase. this has started to worry myself and my wife. any information or ideas would be helpful, either way i am glad we got in before this kicked off but i feel we are not completely safe yet. sadly my wife never be able get british passport without giving up her nationality as her country of indonesia does not allowed dual nationalship :( she has no intension to give up her own passport in 5 years so either way i can see at some point the future things will get complicated to stay in england for the long term.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by nemerkh » Fri Feb 26, 2016 4:34 pm

Also wondering if worst comes to worse, what happens to the eu/noneu couples' lroperty like houses/mortgages etc..

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by secret.simon » Fri Feb 26, 2016 5:43 pm

ohara wrote:I don't really know what the hell I'm talking about so go easy on me, but is it possible that the other 28 member states agreed with Cameron's renegotiation proposals because they knew they'd never hold up in the European court? :o
I think so too. That is what I meant when I said that the deal was negotiated in bad faith.
I am not a lawyer or immigration advisor. My statements/comments do not constitute legal advice. E&OE. Please do not PM me for advice.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by Richard W » Fri Feb 26, 2016 6:43 pm

ohara wrote:I don't really know what the hell I'm talking about so go easy on me, but is it possible that the other 28 member states agreed with Cameron's renegotiation proposals because they knew they'd never hold up in the European court? :o
The rule that first entry is determined by national rules seems fairly robust, even if it may need to be tweaked. A lot of states were opposed to Metock. It's more a case of Cameron pushing on an open door.

The wording in the declaration looks dodgy, but I think a lot of people may be hurt as collateral damage.

There's nothing in the statements as to intended law about prior illegal residence. The 2006 version of the 2006 EEA Regulations had, for getting a family permit, a requirement for prior legal residence in an EEA state, and that is a guide as to what was wanted. The form in the declaration is a scatter gun. Some of the intended effects may be achieved by those with prior illegal residence being unable to obtain lawful residence.

nemerkh
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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by nemerkh » Fri Feb 26, 2016 7:54 pm

If to take a step back and hink about it. They cant just backdate the new laws and apply them them to say noneu nationals who started their processes as in eea2/3s already. As this process leads to eea3/4 & pr. This whole process is obviously a settlement solution for us. Settlement as i. Living, working, kids going to school and having a mortgage. Whereas i totally agree they should crack down on convinience marriages and shan marriages, they cant just put a blank rule on everybody!
Mind you this situation has no precedents to my mind and is a tricky one, but you cant just rip a family from their roots and say goodbye can you?

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by Obie » Fri Feb 26, 2016 8:05 pm

Richard W wrote: A lot of states were opposed to Metock.
Other than Denmark and Ireland and to a lesser extent UK, can you please enlighten me on the rest of these many countries that opposed Metock are?
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robsters
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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by robsters » Fri Feb 26, 2016 10:43 pm

robsters wrote:Hello

read most of this thread we were in Dublin and re entered the UK in september last year using the SS route, we claimed for the UK EU residence card and got it by december 2015, my wife also gave birth in uk the same month as well so our new born son is registered british citizen now as well. my question is my wife was given the 5 year residence card now whatever the outcome of the referendum could they take this card away from my wife? my concern is if we have exit vote i fear they will say i need to be earning the 22.5k a year which for me i would fail to meet at this point but looking for the job paying that or more just incase. this has started to worry myself and my wife. any information or ideas would be helpful, either way i am glad we got in before this kicked off but i feel we are not completely safe yet. sadly my wife never be able get british passport without giving up her nationality as her country of indonesia does not allowed dual nationalship :( she has no intension to give up her own passport in 5 years so either way i can see at some point the future things will get complicated to stay in england for the long term.
any ideas?

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by Richard W » Fri Feb 26, 2016 11:44 pm

Obie wrote:
Richard W wrote: A lot of states were opposed to Metock.
Other than Denmark and Ireland and to a lesser extent UK, can you please enlighten me on the rest of these many countries that opposed Metock are?
Possibly I'm reading too much into the list of those who submitted observations in the Metock case, but the list reads: Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Cyprus, Malta, the Netherlands, Austria, Finland and the UK. According to Wikipedia, the judgement caused law changes in at least Austria, Cyprus, Czech republic and Slovakia, Denmark, Germany, Finland, France, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania and the United Kingdom.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by Richard W » Sat Feb 27, 2016 12:09 am

As to Robsters case, he may be safe. He's in his second EU state, so he's not definitely targeted. The issue is whether what we face is the change as described in the declaration or the more specific change that national law should apply for the first member state resided in. The latter makes most sense, but we just don't know how the law will be worded, or how member states will transpose it.

Member states are allowed to be more generous than the directives require. For example, family members of dual British/Irish citizens who were already wrongly benefiting from the directive were allowed to continue to benefit.

On a matter of detail, note that the financial requirement depends on the number of non-British family members, so the birth of children in the UK does not at present increase the requirement. This would not necessarily be so if unsettled EU nationals were allowed to bring family members into the UK, though EU-citizen family members are exempted by the current directives.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by robsters » Sat Feb 27, 2016 12:58 am

Richard W wrote:As to Robsters case, he may be safe. He's in his second EU state, so he's not definitely targeted. The issue is whether what we face is the change as described in the declaration or the more specific change that national law should apply for the first member state resided in. The latter makes most sense, but we just don't know how the law will be worded, or how member states will transpose it.

Member states are allowed to be more generous than the directives require. For example, family members of dual British/Irish citizens who were already wrongly benefiting from the directive were allowed to continue to benefit.

On a matter of detail, note that the financial requirement depends on the number of non-British family members, so the birth of children in the UK does not at present increase the requirement. This would not necessarily be so if unsettled EU nationals were allowed to bring family members into the UK, though EU-citizen family members are exempted by the current directives.
what happens if its BREXIT vote to leave the eu will the 5yr residence card issued in the uk be taken away?

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by tebee » Sat Feb 27, 2016 7:54 am

robsters wrote:.........

what happens if its BREXIT vote to leave the eu will the 5yr residence card issued in the uk be taken away?
It's very, very unlikely, conceivably possible, but if we get to that point I'm not even sure the UK is a country I would want to live in.

So far it's always been principal that rights that were given, according to the law or the interpretation of the law at that time, are retained, even if the law or it's interpretation subsequently changes. As far as I'm aware there is no legal obligation to do this, but it seems like the decent and compassionate thing to do.

For you to lose these rights in any case the UK must have left both the EU and the EAA and not negotiated any free trade agreement of it's own before departing.

If the UK starts unilaterally rescinding the residence rights of EU citizens living there, I'm sure EU will do the same to the British citizens living there and the UK will be flooded with angry, mostly elderly former expats who have been forced to return, leaving behind jobs and property.

I can't see this scenario happening in any decent society, but with the current wave of xenophobia been driven by the media who knows? The Foreign Devil is a convenient scapegoat to divert the populace's attention away from their other woe's. The rise of the Front National in France and Donald Trump must give pause for thought that there might one day be a UK ruled by a coalition of the raving wing of the conservative party and UKIP.

Of course, one other point is even if the great unwashed public votes for BREXIT the government is not obligated to do so.....
“I speak the truth not so much as I would, but as much as I dare: and I dare a little more as I grow older.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by ohara » Sat Feb 27, 2016 9:24 am

I am somewhat in support of stopping the practice of people who are in the UK illegally using the EEA family permit to legitimise their stay. It does seem absurd. I believe it is also unfair that EEA citizens can sidestep UK immigration law to bring their non-EEA family members in to the UK much easier than British citizens can, although this is probably more a fault of the UK laws than the EEA ones. It is clear that the UK government do not want people to bring their non-EEA family into the UK.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by Obie » Sat Feb 27, 2016 9:30 am

ohara wrote:I am somewhat in support of stopping the practice of people who are in the UK illegally using the EEA family permit to legitimise their stay. It does seem absurd. I believe it is also unfair that EEA citizens can sidestep UK immigration law to bring their non-EEA family members in to the UK much easier than British citizens can, although this is probably more a fault of the UK laws than the EEA ones. It is clear that the UK government do not want people to bring their non-EEA family into the UK.
Unfairness does not come in. It is a rule of the club. Just like a British in Denmark , Netherlands or Germany will not need to do integration.

I believe the immigration status of the family member is immaterial, so long as the relationship is genuine.

I believe that issue does not affect you, so it means little to you if it was changed.

But if you fell in love with a non - national without status and get a child with him or her, I am sure your views will be different .
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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by ohara » Sat Feb 27, 2016 9:39 am

Obie wrote:I believe the immigration status of the family member is immaterial, so long as the relationship is genuine.
I agree with you absolutely. I was talking more about people who are using relationships of convenience to abuse the system.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by wegiwegi » Sat Feb 27, 2016 10:27 am

ohara wrote:
I agree with you absolutely. I was talking more about people who are using relationships of convenience to abuse the system.
Well, my wife's RC was refused as they said there was not much proofs of me exercising my treaty rights, but a hint was made if there is a new application, to expect to attend a marriage interview, because our is a convenience one,( they say ) because in April 2014 a visit visa for her was refused, to what I had to change all my plans, went to pick her up to her country, we flew to mine, got married in August 2014 and got into the UK in September that year.

We live since then together, family and friends know it is geniune, but HO has other ideas, for sure on a 500 questions interview, a few questions will be different between us, I still do not know which niece or nephew goes with which sister of hers, I asked her yesterday which was the christmas present I gave her because I forgot, if things like that make them believe it is a convenience marriage, so be it.
If still together in 3 years, she will have two EU passports, and maybe all of this will be a thing of the past.
Just gathering all the paperwork needed to make a fresh application and see what happens next.
Timeline:
Fourth application sent 21.07.17
HO received 24.07.17
Paid on 25.07.17
Biometrics 23.08.17
COA received 07.09.17
Passports received 07.09.16
Status: Decided on 10.11.17
Documents returned 13.11.17 dated 09
RC 13.11.17 dated 09

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by shnooks1 » Sun Feb 28, 2016 4:46 am

Please clarify how the supposed changes would affect an EU citizen who lives in the US and married an american. The EU spouse has never lived in Europe. Would the couple still be able to move together to any EU country (in our case Ireland) under movement rights? This is also assuming they have no interest in moving to the UK at all.
I previously asked the same question with relevance to moving to the UK, but I am still confused if it would affect people in our situation if we decided to move elsewhere.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by Richard W » Sun Feb 28, 2016 7:11 am

shnooks1 wrote:Please clarify how the supposed changes would affect an EU citizen who lives in the US and married an american. The EU spouse has never lived in Europe. Would the couple still be able to move together to any EU country (in our case Ireland) under movement rights?
If the US spouse has never lived in Europe, there would be no reverse discrimination. The movement would be made under local immigration law. Now, if there is no change in local law, and the EU spouse had never lived in Europe, there would be nationality-based restrictions for the couple to move to the EU directly. For example, a Frenchman moving with his non-EU spouse spouse to the UK would have to come in on the points-based system, and an Englishman moving to France would need a work permit. Essentially, an EU citizen exercising his free movement rights does not necessarily initially have any right at all to family reunification with a non-resident, non-EU family member. After a period of residence (5 years in the UK), the EU citizen may often bring non-EU members over under local law.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by logical_1 » Sun Feb 28, 2016 8:31 am

OK, so after reading all this I'm starting SS in 2 weeks,what are the possible outcomes/sceninarios if the non-eu family members receives the host member states residence card before the referendum?
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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by tebee » Sun Feb 28, 2016 9:06 am

Richard W wrote:
shnooks1 wrote:Please clarify how the supposed changes would affect an EU citizen who lives in the US and married an american. The EU spouse has never lived in Europe. Would the couple still be able to move together to any EU country (in our case Ireland) under movement rights?
If the US spouse has never lived in Europe, there would be no reverse discrimination. The movement would be made under local immigration law. Now, if there is no change in local law, and the EU spouse had never lived in Europe, there would be nationality-based restrictions for the couple to move to the EU directly. For example, a Frenchman moving with his non-EU spouse spouse to the UK would have to come in on the points-based system, and an Englishman moving to France would need a work permit. Essentially, an EU citizen exercising his free movement rights does not necessarily initially have any right at all to family reunification with a non-resident, non-EU family member. After a period of residence (5 years in the UK), the EU citizen may often bring non-EU members over under local law.
There are no changes to free movement for the EU spouse - it's the non-EU partner would have to comply with local laws.
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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by shnooks1 » Sun Feb 28, 2016 9:31 am

tebee wrote:
Richard W wrote:
shnooks1 wrote:Please clarify how the supposed changes would affect an EU citizen who lives in the US and married an american. The EU spouse has never lived in Europe. Would the couple still be able to move together to any EU country (in our case Ireland) under movement rights?
If the US spouse has never lived in Europe, there would be no reverse discrimination. The movement would be made under local immigration law. Now, if there is no change in local law, and the EU spouse had never lived in Europe, there would be nationality-based restrictions for the couple to move to the EU directly. For example, a Frenchman moving with his non-EU spouse spouse to the UK would have to come in on the points-based system, and an Englishman moving to France would need a work permit. Essentially, an EU citizen exercising his free movement rights does not necessarily initially have any right at all to family reunification with a non-resident, non-EU family member. After a period of residence (5 years in the UK), the EU citizen may often bring non-EU members over under local law.
There are no changes to free movement for the EU spouse - it's the non-EU partner would have to comply with local laws.
So if we wanted to move to Ireland I, as the non-eu spouse would need a visa to stay past 90 days has if my eu husband doesn't exist?

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by nemerkh » Sun Feb 28, 2016 10:17 am

tebee wrote:
Richard W wrote:
shnooks1 wrote:Please clarify how the supposed changes would affect an EU citizen who lives in the US and married an american. The EU spouse has never lived in Europe. Would the couple still be able to move together to any EU country (in our case Ireland) under movement rights?
If the US spouse has never lived in Europe, there would be no reverse discrimination. The movement would be made under local immigration law. Now, if there is no change in local law, and the EU spouse had never lived in Europe, there would be nationality-based restrictions for the couple to move to the EU directly. For example, a Frenchman moving with his non-EU spouse spouse to the UK would have to come in on the points-based system, and an Englishman moving to France would need a work permit. Essentially, an EU citizen exercising his free movement rights does not necessarily initially have any right at all to family reunification with a non-resident, non-EU family member. After a period of residence (5 years in the UK), the EU citizen may often bring non-EU members over under local law.
There are no changes to free movement for the EU spouse - it's the non-EU partner would have to comply with local laws.
Hello
But how do you its gonne work out if the noneu spouse can accompany the eu spouse as a family member in the eea.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by shnooks1 » Sun Feb 28, 2016 11:20 am

I understand now thank you for explaining. However, after re-reading this thread I think what liksah said makes more sense and I hope he/she is correct:
http://www.immigrationboards.com/search ... sf=msgonly

"who had no prior lawful residence
probably means:
were not lawfully resident at some point earlier"

The reason why I'm so confused is because I don't understand the reasoning of why I wouldn't share my husband's freedom of movement rights just because I never lived in the EU but what liksah pointed out makes perfect sense. If I was previously living in Europe illegally, then it would be understandable as to why I would not be entitled to any movement rights even though I am married to an EU citizen.
Does anyone else think this may just be a case of poor wording?

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by nemerkh » Sun Feb 28, 2016 11:30 am

I agree with you totally. This explanation is the one that makes most logical and ethical sense.

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Re: New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?

Post by Richard W » Sun Feb 28, 2016 12:21 pm

tebee wrote:
Richard W wrote:For example, a Frenchman moving with his non-EU spouse spouse to the UK would have to come in on the points-based system, and an Englishman moving to France would need a work permit.
There are no changes to free movement for the EU spouse - it's the non-EU partner would have to comply with local laws.
I hope I've selected the part Tebee disputes.

I was specifically referring to moves from outside the EU, with the non-EU spouse never having resided in the EU. The point about the visas etc. is that they allow dependants to apply to accompany them at the offset. Otherwise, the EU spouses in these combinations need to reside in the host country on their own first, which indeed they would still be free to do by exercising their treaty rights.

There may be other visas that can be used. For example, the non-EU spouses may be able to get visas in their own right. It's also possible that there are other disabilities I've overlooked. For example, I'm assuming that foreign EU-citizens are allowed to obtain the work-related visas.

Now, there are exceptions. For example, an Irishman and his spouse can move to the UK as freely as a Briton, but with the changes, no more freely.

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