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Simon,secret.simon wrote:...
On another line of logic, PR requires five continuous years of exercising treaty rights in the same capacity (i.e. as either an EEA citizen or as a dependant of such citizen). By changing from an EEA dependant to an EEA citizen, their PR clock will restart anyway.
Law can not be understood in the absence of logic. Not everything can be or is expected to be spelt out in law.noajthan wrote:Simon,secret.simon wrote:...
On another line of logic, PR requires five continuous years of exercising treaty rights in the same capacity (i.e. as either an EEA citizen or as a dependant of such citizen). By changing from an EEA dependant to an EEA citizen, their PR clock will restart anyway.
Putting logic (even common sense) aside, just wondering if/where this is captured explicitly in the EU regs(as the same question occasionally comes up in the forum).
Cheers.
You can qualify under 15(a) OR 15(b). So, five years as either an EEA national OR as a family member of such a national. Each five year requirement is mathematically discrete and not continuous.Permanent right of residence
15.—(1) The following persons shall acquire the right to reside in the United Kingdom permanently–
(a) an EEA national who has resided in the United Kingdom in accordance with these Regulations for a continuous period of five years;
(b) a family member of an EEA national who is not himself an EEA national but who has resided in the United Kingdom with the EEA national in accordance with these Regulations for a continuous period of five years;
I am not saying that they can't. I am saying that it is subsumed (within the UK) by settled status, which is what PR amounts to in the UK.chaoclive wrote:an Irish citizen getting PR under the EEA regs: this is definitely possible. I have asked this question of the Home Office in the past and it's completely acceptable. Why should an Irish citizen be refused something that a French/Spanish/Romanian citizen can avail of?
I am very intrigued by this case. Firstly, (EU) PR status would only have started if she had exercised treaty rights for five continuous years after she renounced her British citizenship. Has that been the case? If not, she does not have (EU) PR status.chaoclive wrote:As an aside: A friend of mine was told that she still held PR for the UK even after renouncing her British citizenship (she has lived in Northern Ireland for ages) and was born with dual UK/Irish citizenship, even though she had only had a British passport.
Noted.secret.simon wrote:...
Law can not be understood in the absence of logic. Not everything can be or is expected to be spelt out in law.
The current version of the EEA Regulations statesYou can qualify under 15(a) OR 15(b). So, five years as either an EEA national OR as a family member of such a national. Each five year requirement is mathematically discrete and not continuous.Permanent right of residence
15.—(1) The following persons shall acquire the right to reside in the United Kingdom permanently–
(a) an EEA national who has resided in the United Kingdom in accordance with these Regulations for a continuous period of five years;
(b) a family member of an EEA national who is not himself an EEA national but who has resided in the United Kingdom with the EEA national in accordance with these Regulations for a continuous period of five years;
Nothing in the Regulations suggests that you can pick-n-mix bits across regulations. You qualify based on one category alone. In that sense, the EEA Regulations are harder than the Immigration Rules, which does allow years to accumulate (in limited cases) across visa categories.
....
Case law is not a Western European legal concept. It is specifically an English law concept. It doesn't even apply to Scots law.noajthan wrote:I'm aware not everything is spelt out in statute law which is why we also have case law (& even common law) at least in our Western European/Anglo Saxon jurisprudence.