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A friend of a friend has just done exactly that. Just waiting for the outcome of his wife's EEA family permit application.MarthaJones wrote:Regarding renunciation.........do you think this is a valid path? There has been one report of success in these forums. And I have read a couple of legal opinions which suggest it........
I hope you'll report back to us!vinny wrote:A friend of a friend has just done exactly that. Just waiting for the outcome of his wife's EEA family permit application.MarthaJones wrote:Regarding renunciation.........do you think this is a valid path? There has been one report of success in these forums. And I have read a couple of legal opinions which suggest it........
From what you say I understand that even if the Irish authorities check and are aware of the Irish nationality, they will allow the OP to make use of his other EEA nationality in Ireland as their interpretation of McCarthy is not as not narrow as the UK. If this is correct, the OP should be able to exercise treaty rights in Ireland as British and use Singh to move to the UK.Obie wrote:The Irish do check if someone is a dual national, and in any event, they will know he is a British citizen too, by virtue of his place and time of birth.
I am of the view that there is no need for renounciation. If he went to ireland, then there is a link between two countries, and then the McCarthy argument falls away.
The UK designed an interpretation of McCarthy, for which there is no justification.
It will not be in accordance with McCarthy to refuse a dual national who has exercised his right of freemovement in another member state other than the one he/she wishes to assert their right. This is not what was stated in McCarthy.
The regulations dont define MvCarthy.
When did he hold and Irish passport, and why did he get it?MarthaJones wrote:My husband is a dual national Irish/UK citizen by virtue of being born in Northern Ireland. He was born in 1963 and lived there until 2005, when he moved to the US to be with me. His parents and grandparents were born in Northern Ireland. My husband held an Irish passport for 10 years; he presently holds a British passport. He is from a border city in the North and always lived in a Unionist neighborhood.
We have been married since 2005 and have lived that entire time together in the US.
We seek to return to Northern Ireland.
A op was born an irish and british as well, many people uk are ignorant of nothern ireland. Op do not need a passport to prove he is a british or irish, his birth certificate prove it, he was born in northern ireland, so op can chose to either be an irish or british or both, he dont need a passport to prove it he only need it to travel and to get documents for a non eea family. Everyone should my old post advice regarding northern ireland, i say the fact i dont guess when it comes to this part of uk.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:When did he hold and Irish passport, and why did he get it?MarthaJones wrote:My husband is a dual national Irish/UK citizen by virtue of being born in Northern Ireland. He was born in 1963 and lived there until 2005, when he moved to the US to be with me. His parents and grandparents were born in Northern Ireland. My husband held an Irish passport for 10 years; he presently holds a British passport. He is from a border city in the North and always lived in a Unionist neighborhood.
We have been married since 2005 and have lived that entire time together in the US.
We seek to return to Northern Ireland.
Did he ever live or work in RofI?
Would you be willing to live in RofI (especially since his home city is near the border in any case)?
I am sorry - I had not seen this question before. I hope we can continue the conversation.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:When did he hold and Irish passport, and why did he get it?MarthaJones wrote:My husband is a dual national Irish/UK citizen by virtue of being born in Northern Ireland. He was born in 1963 and lived there until 2005, when he moved to the US to be with me. His parents and grandparents were born in Northern Ireland. My husband held an Irish passport for 10 years; he presently holds a British passport. He is from a border city in the North and always lived in a Unionist neighborhood.
We have been married since 2005 and have lived that entire time together in the US.
We seek to return to Northern Ireland.
Did he ever live or work in RofI?
Would you be willing to live in RofI (especially since his home city is near the border in any case)?
My husband never worked in the Republic.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Did your husband ever work in the UK (including Northern Ireland) and use the Irish passport to prove that he had a right to work?
Amazing story on the reason to choose the Irish passport. Im sure that made for a first flight of one's life that was even more stressful than usual.
It's been 23 years, so he can't exactly recall. He says he used to carry the passport with him and may have used it as an identity document (like for cashing checks, etc). I asked him if he may have shown it to the Job Centre and he can't remember. He doubts he ever used it for work as he already has a National Insurance number.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Sorry, you misunderstood. I was asking whether he ever worked in Northern Ireland or in the UK, and if so how he proved to him employer that he could work. Did he show his Irish passport?