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Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator
Imagine soothing music playing in the background while you wait.....CR001 wrote:please be patient, your call/post will be answered in due course
Exactly, some Beethoven or similarCasa wrote:Imagine soothing music playing in the background while you wait.....CR001 wrote:please be patient, your call/post will be answered in due course
secret.simon you're one of our most respected memberssecret.simon wrote:It was just an observation that the specific thread seems to have disappeared. Generally offensive threads are locked, but available for future reference. I am just surprised that the thread has disappeared. Again, I am not fussed.
I expect to be on "thin ice" soon.
Apparently this is going to be a single non-renewable period of seven years, to compensate for the seven years that the UK could have exercised in 2004 on the entry of the A8 countries, but did not.alex1128 wrote:A proposed emergency brake on EU migrants claiming in-work benefits will last for seven years. It will apply on an individual basis for no more than four years, and will be phased out after the first year. But the UK will be allowed to apply the overall restrictions for seven years.
This is going to be fun. Apparently, the Visegard group fought to restrict this indexing to the UK only. So, people wishing to get child benefits at the host country's rate while their children stay in the Eastern European countries will start targeting countries like Sweden, France and Germany. Let us see in five years time how well that plays out.alex1128 wrote:** Restrictions on child benefit for EU migrants will kick in at a reduced rate – indexed to the rate of a migrant’s home country – for new migrants with immediate effect. Existing EU migrants will be paid at the lower rate from 2020. Eastern European countries had hoped to exempt existing migrants altogether.
It will only be a delaying action, not an actual veto. It is not unlike the power the national parliaments currently have to suggest that the Commission think again. They can think again and come back with the same proposal and force it through the second time.alex1128 wrote:** One country – effectively Britain – will have the right to impose a handbrake to refer contentious financial regulation to a meeting of EU leaders in the European council.