- FAQ
- Login
- Register
- Call Workpermit.com for a paid service +44 (0)344-991-9222
ESC
Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
You may have acquired permanent residence in 2006 as the result of an Irish parent having been a worker in the UK for 5 consecutive years. Just living in the UK for 5 years as an Irish citizen does not earn you permanent residence.BigT1 wrote:My question is, in the application it asks do you have a document certifying permanent residence, my intention is to answer yes, as in my British passport or my birth cert as I was born in NI.
Will this be acceptable as it in turn allows me to avoid all the messy p60 for 5 years evidence which I don't have.
I don't think so. Certainly an EEA citizen who is settled here is not necessarily a permanent resident. Obvious examples would be a non-British Irishman recently arrived, and a Maltese citizen born in the UK who has never worked or been self-sufficient.BigT1 wrote:I was born in northern Ireland and hold a British passport from birth so surely I already am a permanent resident
Now, as an EEA national is,the new [url=http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2017/1/made#schedule-paragraph-5]Schedule 6 Regulation 9(1)[/url] of the EEA Regulations 2016 wrote:.., P will, notwithstanding the effect of the definition of an EEA national in regulation 2, be regarded as an EEA national for the purpose of these Regulations...
In other words, you are relying on being regarded as someone who is not British. Therefore you can't claim to be a permanent resident for the purpose of the EEA Regulations 2016 just because you are British.EEA Regulation 2 wrote:“EEA national” means a national of an EEA State who is not also a British citizen;
It's the word 'solely' that makes the big difference. The OP is not solely an EU citizen because he is British, but also because he is an Irish citizen. The big change in the proposals is that residence will suffice; it will no longer be necessary for EEA nationals to be 'qualified persons' or 'permanent residents'.EU citizen: Refers to any person who holds EU citizenship as established under Article 20
(1) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, save that for current purposes,
persons who are EU citizens solely by way of their British nationality are excluded from the
scope of this term. That Article provides “Citizenship of the Union is hereby established. Every
person holding the nationality of a member state shall be a citizen of the Union. Citizenship
of the Union shall be additional to and not replace national citizenship.” However, member
states may withhold EU citizenship from certain groups of citizens, most commonly those in
overseas territories of member states outside the EU.
Richard W wrote:And expanding on Noetic's point, if BigT1 didn't apply for a DCPR before 2013, he isn't going to receive one now - he "will only continue to be regarded as an EEA national for the purpose of considering the position of F [= his wife] under these Regulations" - Schedule 6 Paragraph 9(8).
A possible consolation is that under the UK proposals, it looks as though dual nationals will receive the privileges of EU nationals - but that might just be sloppy wording:It's the word 'solely' that makes the big difference. The OP is not solely an EU citizen because he is British, but also because he is an Irish citizen. The big change in the proposals is that residence will suffice; it will no longer be necessary for EEA nationals to be 'qualified persons' or 'permanent residents'.EU citizen: Refers to any person who holds EU citizenship as established under Article 20
(1) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, save that for current purposes,
persons who are EU citizens solely by way of their British nationality are excluded from the
scope of this term . That Article provides “Citizenship of the Union is hereby established. Every
person holding the nationality of a member state shall be a citizen of the Union. Citizenship
of the Union shall be additional to and not replace national citizenship.” However, member
states may withhold EU citizenship from certain groups of citizens, most commonly those in
overseas territories of member states outside the EU.
Only protected under the EU27 proposal.gillacious_505 wrote:As highlighted in bold. Does that means that there is no safeguard proposals for Surinder Singhers within the cut-off date?
So does that means Surinder Singh holders have no guarantee whatsoever for permanent residency even if they happen to be in the UK before the cut-off date?
Even the EU27 proposal is not explicit at all for protecting their rights. HO is known for their sneakiness.Richard W wrote:Only protected under the EU27 proposal.gillacious_505 wrote:As highlighted in bold. Does that means that there is no safeguard proposals for Surinder Singhers within the cut-off date?
So does that means Surinder Singh holders have no guarantee whatsoever for permanent residency even if they happen to be in the UK before the cut-off date?
There are a few non-working EU27 wives whose residence in the UK is only lawful because of Surinder Singh. Now, they will be covered under June's UK proposal, but only via Surinder Singh under the EU27 proposal. They might well depend on the protection of the ECJ.gillacious_505 wrote:Even the EU27 proposal is not explicit at all for protecting their rights. HO is known for their sneakiness.Richard W wrote:Only protected under the EU27 proposal.gillacious_505 wrote:As highlighted in bold. Does that means that there is no safeguard proposals for Surinder Singhers within the cut-off date?
So does that means Surinder Singh holders have no guarantee whatsoever for permanent residency even if they happen to be in the UK before the cut-off date?
They will still manage to ignore the SSinghers even if they agree to EU27 proposal.
God only knows what will transpire in the negotiations and ultimately what would be fate of those people. With Tories clearly making the role of ECJ role as the red line seems more like an ego problem for tories keeping everything at stake.Richard W wrote:There are a few non-working EU27 wives whose residence in the UK is only lawful because of Surinder Singh. Now, they will be covered under June's UK proposal, but only via Surinder Singh under the EU27 proposal. They might well depend on the protection of the ECJ.gillacious_505 wrote:Even the EU27 proposal is not explicit at all for protecting their rights. HO is known for their sneakiness.Richard W wrote:Only protected under the EU27 proposal.gillacious_505 wrote:As highlighted in bold. Does that means that there is no safeguard proposals for Surinder Singhers within the cut-off date?
So does that means Surinder Singh holders have no guarantee whatsoever for permanent residency even if they happen to be in the UK before the cut-off date?
They will still manage to ignore the SSinghers even if they agree to EU27 proposal.
Now, the typical Surinder Singh spouse beneficiary is a non-EEA national who depends on both Surinder Singh and Metock. If the UK had voted to remain in the EU, such spouses would have depended on the promised changes in the Citizens' Directive not being retrospective. It's entirely possible that Metock will be reversed in part in the negotiations.