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EU law - 5 years.JGSvdS wrote:Thanks for your message.
No, she does not hold a Dutch-issued EHIC.
By the way, is the qualifying period (for PR) for an EEA national married to a BC 5 years or 3 years? I note there is such a distinction in the AN guidance (3 years, 5 years if not married to a BC) but see no mention in PR guide. OK, it's a different application, I realise, but they are on a linked subject (PR generally leads to AN, so I thought there might be consistency......).
It does not mean '3 years and you're British'!JGSvdS wrote:Well, it's Booklet AN (June 2016) which makes the distinction, viz:
* p3: If you are married to......a British citizen
..you should meet......Have lived in the UK for a minimum of 3 years before you apply...
* p4: If you are NOT married to....a British citizen
....you should meet...Have lived in the UK for a minimum of 5 years before you apply..
This distinction, if applicable to EEA(PR), would be most useful in my CSI endeavours.
It is confusing.JGSvdS wrote:OK, thanks, got it.
Confusing, indeed. Well, I think so.
The 23+ years you haven't told us about might be very relevant. If you were working in another EEA country while living with your wife, e.g. in the Netherlands, you may be able to sponsor (yes!) your wife under the Surinder Singh regulation. In that case, your wife would have achieved permanent residence on 30 April 2006.JGSvdS wrote:My wife is EEA (Dutch) Citizen married to me, a British Citizen. Married 40+ years, resident in the UK since 1999.
I think there is, but I also think it's not worth pursuing in the OP's case, except perhaps as Plan D.Noajthan wrote:It does not mean '3 years and you're British'!
There are no secret shortcuts to citizenship that anyone is omitting to tell you. And precious few benefits (in immigration terms) of marriage to a BC.
Hmm. As it happens, I was working in the Netherlands, living there with my wife, before entering the UK May, 1999. I was there for the period 6/96-5/99. Does that put us in Surinder Singh territory?The 23+ years you haven't told us about might be very relevant. If you were working in another EEA country while living with your wife, e.g. in the Netherlands, you may be able to sponsor (yes!) your wife under the Surinder Singh regulation. In that case, your wife would have achieved permanent residence on 30 April 2006.
Yes. 35 months looks pretty genuine. As to integration into the Dutch state, well, having a native wife must count for something!JGSvdS wrote:As it happens, I was working in the Netherlands, living there with my wife, before entering the UK May, 1999. I was there for the period 6/96-5/99. Does that put us in Surinder Singh territory?
There's one possible complication, which you can probably overcome. Nowadays, a British sponsor in a Surinder Singh case doesn't have to establish that he would be a 'qualified person' or would have permanent residence. I'm not sure why this is. It may be because having right of abode implies the personal rights derived from permanent residence. If that is the case, there is the possible issue that permanent residence in the EEA sense didn't exist until 2006.JGSvdS wrote:Hmm. As it happens, I was working in the Netherlands, living there with my wife, before entering the UK May, 1999. I was there for the period 6/96-5/99. Does that put us in Surinder Singh territory?
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2006 ... 003_en.pdfPeriods of residence under the 2000 Regulations
6.
—(1) Any period during which a person carried out an activity or was resident in the United Kingdom in accordance with the 2000 Regulations shall be treated as a period during which the person carried out that activity or was resident in the United Kingdom in accordance with these Regulations for the purpose of calculating periods of activity and residence under these Regulations
Put it down to the British sense of fair play. Contrived Surinder Singh comes across as not quite cricket, and struck-down regulations have explicitly excluded it. This case is uncontrived Surinder Singh, though whether a caseworker would be aware of the difference is another matter.noajthan wrote:Brits benefit from case law of Eind and don't need to exercise treaty rights once back in Blighty.
<snip>
For reasons that sadly fly in the face of free movement, HO and UK gov appears to be gunning for Surinder Singh-ers in particular.
Extreme hardball would be to deny the relevance of Eind. The OP meets statements of judge-derived law delivered in Eind, but is more of a stretch from the fundamentals - the OP and his wife were together before they moved to the Netherlands, whereas Mr Eind was (re-)united with his daughter in the host country.noajthan wrote:The evidence will have to be rock-solid (if not unimpeachable) as HO plays hard ball in this area.
The case will stand or fail based on convincing a caseworker based on the quality of the evidence submitted.except in special circumstances, you are not treated as an EEA national under UK law (in this context). And that is even before Brexit.
Yes, I said 'struck-down regulations'. The regulations are not allowed to explicitly capture the idea, just as the early Immigration Acts weren't allowed to make skin colour an explicit criterion. What we have at the moment is the 'centre of life' rule, which most people expect to be overturned in the courts.noajthan wrote:There is no concept of 'good SS' versus 'bad SS' captured in even the UK Regs.
Case law has previously determined that motive is not a material factor.