Kitty wrote:vinny wrote:That's what I was wondering: would welcome a bit more detail!
The UK does of course make allowance for the judgment of the Court of Justice in Case C-370/90 Surinder Singh: if a UK national (or person with dual nationality of the UK and another Member State) exercises residence rights elsewhere in the Union, that person will be covered by the Regulations.
However, despite the apparent overhaul of the Regulations this year to codify the case law of the Court of Justice, the UK authorities have omitted to amend Regulation 9, which covers these ‘Surinder Singh situations’, in order to comply with the Court’s judgment in Case C-291/05.
The effect of Regulation 9 of the Regulations is that a UK national (including a dual national) who has worked or been self-employed in another Member State is treated like an ‘EEA national’ upon return to the UK. This still requires, however, that the UK national be a ‘qualified person’ under the Regulations (see Regulation 6) in order for her family members to enjoy residence rights in the UK.
This contradicts the Eind judgment (Case C-291/05). Regulation 9 also still requires the UK national to have worked or have been self-employed in another Member State; it does not cover those who may have exercised residence rights elsewhere by studying or being self-sufficient. This appears to be outdated; while the Surinder Singh judgment only dealt with workers or the self-employed, that is because at the time of the judgment, legislation on the free movement of students or the self-sufficient had not yet been adopted.