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I don't think that that has to be the case, though, if the person qualifies under the British immigration laws and chooses to exercise that "qualification". Which would be more advantageous to the person is a different question and depends on all the circumstances.mym wrote:Your HSMP ceases to be the basis of your immigration status in the UK the moment you are married to an EEA Citizen exercising treaty rights in the UK. From that moment, and for the next five years, your status is determined under the EEA Regulations not the Immigration Rules.
You cannot choose not to be a spouse of an EEA Citizen (other than by divorce or murder of course) and the state cannot refuse to accord you the rights that flow from that.Christophe wrote:I don't think that that has to be the case, though, if the person qualifies under the British immigration laws and chooses to exercise that "qualification". Which would be more advantageous to the person is a different question and depends on all the circumstances.mym wrote:Your HSMP ceases to be the basis of your immigration status in the UK the moment you are married to an EEA Citizen exercising treaty rights in the UK. From that moment, and for the next five years, your status is determined under the EEA Regulations not the Immigration Rules.
Agreed. But I can choose to use national law or I can choose to use european law, and will likely go with whichever is most in my favour. Once I have chosen one route, I may or may not have to make an explicit decision to change to the other.mym wrote:You cannot choose not to be a spouse of an EEA Citizen (other than by divorce or murder of course) and the state cannot refuse to accord you the rights that flow from that.
That was the point I was making. So the OP might want to explore both options, if he has more than one.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Agreed. But I can choose to use national law or I can choose to use european law, and will likely go with whichever is most in my favour. Once I have chosen one route, I may or may not have to make an explicit decision to change to the other.mym wrote:You cannot choose not to be a spouse of an EEA Citizen (other than by divorce or murder of course) and the state cannot refuse to accord you the rights that flow from that.