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What exactly do you mean by the bolded part above?mrjgc wrote:I have never lived any part of my life as an irish citizen, I am merely getting the irish passport as it allows me to use the EEA2 route for my wife (hope that doesn't sound too bad), I was advised to do this by immigration when I called them, as for my employer, is it required that I tell them I want to be considered as an Irish citizen?, if I do not do this, will it have a bearing on the EEA2 application for my wife?
Thanks Jambo, certainly will do, hoping to get the application away as soon as my irish passport is received in a week or so, what is the name of the legislation which you are saying will come into effect in Mid July?Jambo wrote:I suggest you apply ASAP as changes to the legislation which will come into effect in mid July would prevent British dual nationals of making use of their EEA nationality to apply under the EEA regulation.
Not sure why part of my comment showed in bold, I read the McCarthy case, it seems where we differ is that she was claiming benefits and not employed, I don't claim any benefits at all, not even child benefit for my son nor anything else.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:What exactly do you mean by the bolded part above?mrjgc wrote:I have never lived any part of my life as an irish citizen, I am merely getting the irish passport as it allows me to use the EEA2 route for my wife (hope that doesn't sound too bad), I was advised to do this by immigration when I called them, as for my employer, is it required that I tell them I want to be considered as an Irish citizen?, if I do not do this, will it have a bearing on the EEA2 application for my wife?
It is actually not clear that you can simply apply for an Irish passport and then be considered Irish for the purposes of free movement law. See http://www.immigrationboards.com/viewtopic.php?p=488340
I made it bold so that I could more easily refer to it.mrjgc wrote:Not sure why part of my comment showed in bold, I read the McCarthy case, it seems where we differ is that she was claiming benefits and not employed, I don't claim any benefits at all, not even child benefit for my son nor anything else.
When exactly are these changes coming into effect, is there a specific date ?Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:I made it bold so that I could more easily refer to it.mrjgc wrote:Not sure why part of my comment showed in bold, I read the McCarthy case, it seems where we differ is that she was claiming benefits and not employed, I don't claim any benefits at all, not even child benefit for my son nor anything else.
There is not a simple prerequisite list which allows you to say "McCarthy applies to me because I am a woman living on benefits" or "McCarthy does not apply to me because I am working".
Remember that you have never effectively been Irish in your day to day past. No passport.
UKBA seems to be taking the even more extreme position, in these upcoming changes, that if you have British citizenship, then any other EU citizenship does not matter. So if you had been born and raised in Spain as a Spanish citizen, but your father was British and so you happened to have British citizenship, then the EU rules would only apply to you if (through Singh) you had worked abroad.
so does that mean basically that those applications received before July 16th won't come under this new constraint?, but those received after this date will?Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:http://www.freemovement.org.uk/2012/06/ ... gulations/
Well, I certainly hope that will be the case as I will definetly be proceeding with the EEA2 application. My wife's mother was born in Hungary, and her grandparents both held Hungarian Citizenship, so not sure whether that will have any extra bearing on things.Jambo wrote:If I understand correctly, Schedule 3 2 (3) means British dual national family members would be able to enjoy the old (current) regulations if the non-EEA is in the UK under the regulations on 16th July and makes an application for RC before 16th October.
I am not sure there is any difference. McCarthy was also born Irish as far as I can see. She just applied for the passport after she got married.tanabrennan wrote:As an irish born in nothern ireland, you are an irish by birth you dont need to hold a passport to prove this, your birth certificate say so. Mccarthy was not born an irish, she inherite it through her mother, get this right, but as for you, you were born an irish and you do not need a passport to prove this.
They are not the same, even though mccarthy is an irish citizen for that her mother was irish, this person dont his or her parents to be irish, he was born irish and dont need a passport to prove this but unlike mccarthy she need a passport to prove this.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:I am not sure there is any difference. McCarthy was also born Irish as far as I can see. She just applied for the passport after she got married.tanabrennan wrote:As an irish born in nothern ireland, you are an irish by birth you dont need to hold a passport to prove this, your birth certificate say so. Mccarthy was not born an irish, she inherite it through her mother, get this right, but as for you, you were born an irish and you do not need a passport to prove this.