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garymon wrote:This is a problem I am running into. I would like to know if someone else may know the answer.
Ok, here is my situation.
I live in Paris, and my wife is French, of course. I have my "titre de sejour" and am allowed to work and live here. Now, as I understand it, since I am married to an EU national I have the right to work in any other EU country with a "family permit" if she is with me in that country. So far so good.
Now, here is my problem. I could be offered a job in the UK, but this position is home based, wherever I choose home to be, Paris of course. I would be required to travel to the UK 50% of the time. Would I need a special kind of workpermit in the UK to do this? even though I am actually living in Paris?
Are there any loopholes or ways around this? Not already having rights to work in the UK is lowering my chances drastically.
Thanks, and I hope someone can help.
garymon wrote:This is a problem I am running into. I would like to know if someone else may know the answer.
Ok, here is my situation.
I live in Paris, and my wife is French, of course. I have my "titre de sejour" and am allowed to work and live here. Now, as I understand it, since I am married to an EU national I have the right to work in any other EU country with a "family permit" if she is with me in that country. So far so good.
Now, here is my problem. I could be offered a job in the UK, but this position is home based, wherever I choose home to be, Paris of course. I would be required to travel to the UK 50% of the time. Would I need a special kind of workpermit in the UK to do this? even though I am actually living in Paris?
Are there any loopholes or ways around this? Not already having rights to work in the UK is lowering my chances drastically.
Thanks, and I hope someone can help.
No you wouldn'tgarymon wrote:.....I thought about getting french citizenship but, from my knowledge, I would have to forfit my US citizenship, which I do not want to do....
Dawie wrote:Here is the official US government's view on dual citizenship:
http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_t ... _1753.html
Seems officially they frown on dual citizenship but do not explicitly prohibit it. You can only lose your US citizenship if you acquire the citizenship of another country with the INTENTION to give up US citizenship. This is obviously open to interpretation, but presumably the government would have to prove intent.