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Further details on Monday.mia777 wrote:Are there any details available on the status of non EU (extended) family members? Ie those with a five year residence permit (EEA2)?
Because the UK will be a third-party country then? The CJEU may be the highest court at EU level and so may be best placed to have jurisdiction within it, but as the UK will be out of the EU, it logically follows that the CJEU's jurisdiction ceases.Obie wrote:The right of the British Citizen in the 27 countries will be controlled by the CJEU, at an EU level after Brexit, why should the EU citizen in the UK not have similar right.
As I recall, the government proposal is that ECJ case law before the date of Brexit will become part of the UK's case law on par with UK Supreme Court judgments. So, the SS route and Zambrano will arrive into UK case law.mkhan2525 wrote:So does this mean existing ECJ case law will no longer have effect in UK courts to enforce existing rights under EU law after Brexit?
You analogy is completely nonsensical.secret.simon wrote: Because the UK will be a third-party country then? The CJEU may be the highest court at EU level and so may be best placed to have jurisdiction within it, but as the UK will be out of the EU, it logically follows that the CJEU's jurisdiction ceases.
I wonder what your attitude to the situation would have been had the UK insisted that British citizens resident in newly independent colonies were to remain under UK judicial jurisdiction, even after those countries became independent. After all, many of those citizens exercised freedom of movement within the British Empire as then. Would you have approved of white British people in Zimbabwe being subject to British courts for life, not Zimbabwean courts, even after Zimbabwean independence?
I believe that the one element of the EU proposal most likely to be dropped is having continued jurisdiction on EEA citizens in the UK. It is simply not sustainable for a foreign court to exercise jurisdiction in another court, especially if that jurisdiction is based on people, rather than actions. That smacks of modern-day rac-ism, not of skin colour, but of citizenship of birth.
The point is, the treaty will be a treaty between the EU and a third-party country, the UK. EU law does not apply between EU and third-party countries, public international law does. Just as EU law or the CJEU does not govern treaties between the EU and the US or Canada.Obie wrote:The only arbiter of EU law, is the CJEU.
I don't think you get what i was trying to convey.secret.simon wrote:The point is, the treaty will be a treaty between the EU and a third-party country, the UK. EU law does not apply between EU and third-party countries, public international law does. Just as EU law or the CJEU does not govern treaties between the EU and the US or Canada.Obie wrote:The only arbiter of EU law, is the CJEU.
Today a 15 page (heard this on the radio) document will be published by the government which is supposed to give all the details. I somehow doubt all the details could be summarised on 15 pages.tortise wrote:Hi obie
Those who came to uk and received RC after triggering article 50 under SS route what will happen to their status ? Please guide me with this .thank you
It may not be the UK Supreme Court, but it won't be the ECJ either, if you read the article that you linked to.Obie wrote:It doesn't matter any more, as David Davis has realised that the UK Supreme Court cannot be the final Arbiter for the deal between UK and EU, if there will be one..
It is a known unknown. We do not yet know the answer to that. Wait for the document that alterhase was referring to.tortise wrote:Hi obie
Those who came to uk and received RC after triggering article 50 under SS route what will happen to their status ? Please guide me with this .thank you
An excellent analysis (by the Institute for Government) of what is likely to happen to (and what Parliament should do about) ECJ case law post-Brexit. Definitely worth a read for lawyers and people interested in the law.mkhan2525 wrote:So does this mean existing ECJ case law will no longer have effect in UK courts to enforce existing rights under EU law after Brexit?
I don't think you have been reading my post.secret.simon wrote:It may not be the UK Supreme Court, but it won't be the ECJ either, if you read the article that you linked to.Obie wrote:It doesn't matter any more, as David Davis has realised that the UK Supreme Court cannot be the final Arbiter for the deal between UK and EU, if there will be one..
Post-Brexit, the relationship between the UK and the EU will come under public international law, not EU law. Therefore the ECJ would not have jurisdiction on the same basis as the UK Supreme Court does not have jurisdiction. It will likely be an independent arbitration body, made up of both EU and UK representatives.
It is a known unknown. We do not yet know the answer to that. Wait for the document that alterhase was referring to.tortise wrote:Hi obie
Those who came to uk and received RC after triggering article 50 under SS route what will happen to their status ? Please guide me with this .thank you
Family Members wrote:• family dependants who join a qualifying EU citizen in the UK before the UK’s exit will be able to apply for settled status after five years (including where the five years falls after our exit), irrespective of the specified date. Those joining after our exit will be subject to the same rules as those joining British citizens or alternatively to the postexit immigration arrangements for EU citizens who arrive after the specified date;
• the specified date will be no earlier than the 29 March 2017, the date the formal Article 50 process for exiting the EU was triggered, and no later than the date of the UK’s withdrawal from the EU. We expect to discuss the specified date with our European partners as part of delivering a reciprocal dea
29. Family members6 of eligible EU citizens (who can be either EU citizens or non-EU nationals) who are resident in the UK before we leave the EU will also be eligible to apply for settled status, provided that they too meet the criteria above and have been in a genuine relationship with an eligible EU citizen while resident in the UK.
30. Future family members of those EU citizens who arrived before the specified date – for example a future spouse – who come to the UK after we leave the EU, will be subject to the same rules that apply to non-EU nationals joining British citizens, or alternatively to the postexit immigration arrangements for EU citizens who arrive after the specified date.
39. After our departure, it will become mandatory to apply for permission to stay in the UK.
58. The arrangements set out above will be enshrined in UK law and enforceable through the UK judicial system, up to and including the Supreme Court. We are also ready to make commitments in the Withdrawal Agreement which will have the status of international law. The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) will not have jurisdiction in the UK.
Footnote:29. Family members of eligible EU citizens (who can be either EU citizens or non-EU nationals) who are resident in the UK before we leave the EU will also be eligible to apply for settled status, provided that they too meet the criteria above and have been in a genuine relationship with an eligible EU citizen while resident in the UK. Family members who do not yet have five years’ residence will also be eligible to apply for permission to stay (‘leave to remain’) to enable them to accrue these. Most EU citizens will be eligible for the settlement scheme in their own right (rather than as a family member of a resident EU citizen), so this will be most relevant to non-EU national family members. However, EU citizens will be able to access the scheme as a family member if they wish to and can evidence their relationship
Includes direct family members (spouse/civil partner, direct descendants in the descending line (under 21 or dependent), direct dependants in the ascending line), including those with retained rights, and extended family members whose residence has previously been facilitated by the Home Office.