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ESC

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The text in blue is the reason why you do not have EC rights.drmetalhead wrote:i am married to a british citizen who is living outisde of the uk and not in any eu country.
That may be just nit-picking now and not help the OP at all but physical relocation is not always necessary as providing cross-border services or cross-border working could count too (although I do not know HO's opinion regards the latter case). I think John once mentioned that the UK would also not strictly enforce the six months anymore.sushdmehta wrote:A British national cannot exercise a Treaty Right in the UK.
You may get EC rights if your British citizen spouse moves to an EEA country (other than the country of her citizenship) and works there (in employment or self-employment) for at least 6 months, and you join her in that EEA country as a family member. Para 3(a)(ii) of Who is an "exempt person"?
Not sure if that's right. The actual text of the 2006 Regulations is thus:86ti wrote:That may be just nit-picking now and not help the OP at all but physical relocation is not always necessary as providing cross-border services or cross-border working could count too (although I do not know HO's opinion regards the latter case). I think John once mentioned that the UK would also not strictly enforce the six months anymore.sushdmehta wrote:A British national cannot exercise a Treaty Right in the UK.
You may get EC rights if your British citizen spouse moves to an EEA country (other than the country of her citizenship) and works there (in employment or self-employment) for at least 6 months, and you join her in that EEA country as a family member. Para 3(a)(ii) of Who is an "exempt person"?
Yes, that's what the EEA regulations say and the GMC will certainly rely on that. But there is still the Carpenter case and possibly newer ECJ judgements relating to the cases I mentioned above. The UK may have a very narrow view on those matters. But as I said this is just nit-picking and not helpful to this case.Mr Rusty wrote:Not sure if that's right. The actual text of the 2006 Regulations is thus:86ti wrote:That may be just nit-picking now and not help the OP at all but physical relocation is not always necessary as providing cross-border services or cross-border working could count too (although I do not know HO's opinion regards the latter case). I think John once mentioned that the UK would also not strictly enforce the six months anymore.sushdmehta wrote:A British national cannot exercise a Treaty Right in the UK.
You may get EC rights if your British citizen spouse moves to an EEA country (other than the country of her citizenship) and works there (in employment or self-employment) for at least 6 months, and you join her in that EEA country as a family member. Para 3(a)(ii) of Who is an "exempt person"?
"Family members of United Kingdom nationals
9.—(1) If the conditions in paragraph (2) are satisfied, these Regulations apply to a person who
is the family member of a United Kingdom national as if the United Kingdom national were an
EEA national.
(2) The conditions are that—
(a) the United Kingdom national is residing in an EEA State as a worker or self-employed
person or was so residing before returning to the United Kingdom; and
(b) if the family member of the United Kingdom national is his spouse or civil partner, the
parties are living together in the EEA State or had entered into the marriage or civil
partnership and were living together in that State before the United Kingdom national
returned to the United Kingdom."
The residence requirement looks pretty specific to me