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The Lounes judgement of ECJ is superior to the UK law and whatever guidance the case worker has. You should mention the Lounes case in the notes/cover letter of your application politely but firmly.Navaro2 wrote: ↑Sat Dec 30, 2017 11:01 amI am dual citizen and my wife is going to apply for PR now. After Lounes judgement there is still no change to the Non EEA national family members of dual EEA and British citizens guide (version 5.0) from 21 April 2017 I found on gov.
As someone posted above " The caseworker will follow the present guide and may not take into consideration the final judgement of Lounes from November.
I am wondering how to support the application we are going to submit to point that final judgement as the key.
However if they are going to update that guideline to be clear at all that is a question.
Thanks to everyone for useful advices.
Dear Mr XXXXXX,
Thank you for your e-mail of 19 December 2017 concerning the rights of EU citizens in the context of Brexit.
Safeguarding the status and rights derived from EU law at the date of withdrawal of EU citizens and UK nationals is an essential objective of the ongoing negotiations with the United Kingdom.
On 15 December 2017, the European Council decided on the basis of the Joint Report that sufficient progress has been achieved in each of the three priority areas of citizens' rights, the dialogue on Ireland / Northern Ireland and the financial settlement.
You can find the Joint Report from the negotiators of the European Union and the United Kingdom Government on progress during phase 1 of negotiations under Article 50 TEU on the United Kingdom's orderly withdrawal from the European Union at http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-17-5173_en.htm.
You can find more details about the Joint Report and its impact of citizens' rights in our dedicated Questions and Answers document (available at https://ec.europa.eu/commission/sites/b ... ghts_1.pdf) and our website at https://ec.europa.eu/commission/brexit-negotiations_en.
The basic delineation of personal scope of the citizens’ rights Part of the Withdrawal Agreement is found in paragraph 10 of the Joint Report – EU citizens who in accordance with Union law legally reside in the UK, and UK nationals who in accordance with Union law legally reside in an EU27 Member State by the specified date, as well as their family members as defined by Directive 2004/38/EC (the Free Movement Directive, available at http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/Lex ... 616:EN:PDF) who are legally resident in the host State by the specified date, will fall within the scope of the Withdrawal Agreement.
Obtaining status under the Withdrawal Agreement will be made in accordance with the objective criteria established in the Withdrawal Agreement that will essentially mirror criteria Articles 6, 7, 12, 13 and 16 to 18 of the Free Movement Directive or primary law (Articles 21, 45 or 49 TFEU) attach to obtaining (and retaining) the right of residence under.
The Joint Report covers only EU citizens and their family members, who lawfully resided in the UK at the time of withdrawal, and UK nationals and their family members, who did so in an EU27 Member State.
Given the scope of our negotiating mandate, as outlined by the Council, the December deal covers neither UK nationals residing in the UK at the time of withdrawal pursuant to case law of the Court of Justice on returning nationals (case C-370/90 Surinder Singh) nor persons currently protected by Article 20 TFEU, such as those concerned by the ruling of the Court of Justice in case C-34/09 Ruiz Zambrano. In any event, we expect that UK citizens and their family members residing in the UK in accordance with these rules will be able to stay in the UK under the domestic laws that are currently underlying their right of residence. These domestic laws are not affected by the UK's withdrawal.
Yours sincerely,
The Task Force for the Preparation and Conduct of the Negotiations
with the United Kingdom under Article 50 TEU (IA)
cid:image001.gif@01CDAC48.DEFA49A0
European Commission
Rue de la Loi 200
B-1049 Brussels/Belgium
Fascinating information and thank you for contacting the team and contributing to the forums.mkhan2525 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2018 6:29 pmBefore Christmas, I wrote to the Brexit negotiating team at the EU Commision to confirm the status of SS and Zambrano rights after Brexit. I have received a response from them today confirming these rights will fall under dometic law after Brexit (see final paragraph).
This could also have potential implications for those relying on the Lounes case as the ruling comes under derived rights.
Dear Mr XXXXXX,
Thank you for your e-mail of 19 December 2017 concerning the rights of EU citizens in the context of Brexit.
Safeguarding the status and rights derived from EU law at the date of withdrawal of EU citizens and UK nationals is an essential objective of the ongoing negotiations with the United Kingdom.
On 15 December 2017, the European Council decided on the basis of the Joint Report that sufficient progress has been achieved in each of the three priority areas of citizens' rights, the dialogue on Ireland / Northern Ireland and the financial settlement.
You can find the Joint Report from the negotiators of the European Union and the United Kingdom Government on progress during phase 1 of negotiations under Article 50 TEU on the United Kingdom's orderly withdrawal from the European Union at http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-17-5173_en.htm.
You can find more details about the Joint Report and its impact of citizens' rights in our dedicated Questions and Answers document (available at https://ec.europa.eu/commission/sites/b ... ghts_1.pdf) and our website at https://ec.europa.eu/commission/brexit-negotiations_en.
The basic delineation of personal scope of the citizens’ rights Part of the Withdrawal Agreement is found in paragraph 10 of the Joint Report – EU citizens who in accordance with Union law legally reside in the UK, and UK nationals who in accordance with Union law legally reside in an EU27 Member State by the specified date, as well as their family members as defined by Directive 2004/38/EC (the Free Movement Directive, available at http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/Lex ... 616:EN:PDF) who are legally resident in the host State by the specified date, will fall within the scope of the Withdrawal Agreement.
Obtaining status under the Withdrawal Agreement will be made in accordance with the objective criteria established in the Withdrawal Agreement that will essentially mirror criteria Articles 6, 7, 12, 13 and 16 to 18 of the Free Movement Directive or primary law (Articles 21, 45 or 49 TFEU) attach to obtaining (and retaining) the right of residence under.
The Joint Report covers only EU citizens and their family members, who lawfully resided in the UK at the time of withdrawal, and UK nationals and their family members, who did so in an EU27 Member State.
Given the scope of our negotiating mandate, as outlined by the Council, the December deal covers neither UK nationals residing in the UK at the time of withdrawal pursuant to case law of the Court of Justice on returning nationals (case C-370/90 Surinder Singh) nor persons currently protected by Article 20 TFEU, such as those concerned by the ruling of the Court of Justice in case C-34/09 Ruiz Zambrano. In any event, we expect that UK citizens and their family members residing in the UK in accordance with these rules will be able to stay in the UK under the domestic laws that are currently underlying their right of residence. These domestic laws are not affected by the UK's withdrawal.
Yours sincerely,
The Task Force for the Preparation and Conduct of the Negotiations
with the United Kingdom under Article 50 TEU (IA)
cid:image001.gif@01CDAC48.DEFA49A0
European Commission
Rue de la Loi 200
B-1049 Brussels/Belgium
As the only such domestic law is a statutory instrument drawn up under the law taking us into the EEC, and that does not cover the full scope of the relevant EU law, the author can only mean that the family members residing in accordance with those EU rules will be able to stay under no law! Is the author stupid or effectively a liar? It looks as though the beneficiaries of SS will have to take their case to the EUCJ after departure. They may well win.mkhan2525 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2018 6:29 pm...
Given the scope of our negotiating mandate, as outlined by the Council, the December deal covers neither UK nationals residing in the UK at the time of withdrawal pursuant to case law of the Court of Justice on returning nationals (case C-370/90 Surinder Singh) nor persons currently protected by Article 20 TFEU, such as those concerned by the ruling of the Court of Justice in case C-34/09 Ruiz Zambrano. In any event, we expect that UK citizens and their family members residing in the UK in accordance with these rules will be able to stay in the UK under the domestic laws that are currently underlying their right of residence. These domestic laws are not affected by the UK's withdrawal.
Yours sincerely,
The Task Force for the Preparation and Conduct of the Negotiations
with the United Kingdom under Article 50 TEU (IA)
I don't believe there is any such provision in the Immigration Rules. It would currently have to be an application outside the rules.
Are they not the same?
No. An EEA national gets a DCPR, which does not expire. A non-EEA national gets a PRC, which expires after 10 years - or in 2021, if sooner, under current plans. (Permanent residence does not expire - but is scheduled to become irrelevant.)
No. I am assuming he was born in the UK. At his age he could only have PR if a sponsor had come to the end of his/her working life. He would only be British if his mother (or you) had attained PR when he was born, or one of you had most recently entered the UK from the Republic of Ireland. You could apply to register him as British. However, double check that he will not forfeit Dutch nationality by acquiring British nationality after birth. The English Wikipedia says he'd be OK, but I don't think Dutch law is stable enough to be able to trust Wikipedia.kabuki wrote: ↑Sat Jan 27, 2018 12:12 pmAdditionally, we have an 8 month old who is a dual national (Dutch/US) and we'll want to have his rights confirmed. He was born in May and we have docs that only confirm 5 years of accessing treaty rights as of the end of Dec. Could we still apply for a British passport for him or a PR doc?
Thank you. Too much uncertainty at these times. Debating whether I should apply for PR and then citizenship myself. At least then we'd have UK law to keep my family together.Richard W wrote: ↑Sun Jan 28, 2018 5:13 pmNo. I am assuming he was born in the UK. At his age he could only have PR if a sponsor had come to the end of his/her working life. He would only be British if his mother (or you) had attained PR when he was born, or one of you had most recently entered the UK from the Republic of Ireland. You could apply to register him as British. However, double check that he will not forfeit Dutch nationality by acquiring British nationality after birth. The English Wikipedia says he'd be OK, but I don't think Dutch law is stable enough to be able to trust Wikipedia.
Today's tweet by the European Commission seems to confirm that treaty derivative rights (SS, Zambrano and Lounes) may not apply in the transition period. That is, they may well cease to apply from 29th March 2019.mkhan2525 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2018 6:29 pmBefore Christmas, I wrote to the Brexit negotiating team at the EU Commision to confirm the status of SS and Zambrano rights after Brexit. I have received a response from them today confirming these rights will fall under dometic law after Brexit (see final paragraph).
This could also have potential implications for those relying on the Lounes case as the ruling comes under derived rights.
Note that EU regulatory instruments will apply. So, Directive 2004/38/EC should continue to apply. But, even in the transition period, the UK will have left the EU and the EU Treaties (and therefore the routes reliant on the Treaties) would logically no longer apply. Therefore the SS, Zambrano and Lounes routes would shut on that date.European Commission wrote:Mandate received to begin negotiations with the UK on transitional arrangements:
No "cherry picking"
Existing EU regulatory instruments to apply
No representation in EU institutions/bodies
Transition period to be clearly defined
#Brexit → http://europa.eu/!qP78Dk
This is factually incorrect because we will be moving to a Norway style transition. As long as the UK is still part of the Single Market then SS and Loumes routes will continue to apply.secret.simon wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2018 8:54 pmToday's tweet by the European Commission seems to confirm that treaty derivative rights (SS, Zambrano and Lounes) may not apply in the transition period. That is, they may well cease to apply from 29th March 2019.mkhan2525 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2018 6:29 pmBefore Christmas, I wrote to the Brexit negotiating team at the EU Commision to confirm the status of SS and Zambrano rights after Brexit. I have received a response from them today confirming these rights will fall under dometic law after Brexit (see final paragraph).
This could also have potential implications for those relying on the Lounes case as the ruling comes under derived rights.
Note that EU regulatory instruments will apply. So, Directive 2004/38/EC should continue to apply. But, even in the transition period, the UK will have left the EU and the EU Treaties (and therefore the routes reliant on the Treaties) would logically no longer apply. Therefore the SS, Zambrano and Lounes routes would shut on that date.European Commission wrote:Mandate received to begin negotiations with the UK on transitional arrangements:
No "cherry picking"
Existing EU regulatory instruments to apply
No representation in EU institutions/bodies
Transition period to be clearly defined
#Brexit → http://europa.eu/!qP78Dk
Note that the tweet mentioned "regulatory instruments" and not laws or legal instruments, etc. I am therefore of the view that the EU is looking at a narrower agreement than is widely expected.