Professor Steve Peers
Yesterday’s ‘joint
report’ on the progress in the Brexit negotiations (accompanied by a Commission
paper and a joint
technical note on EU27 and UK citizens’ rights) amounts to an informal deal
to proceed to the second phase of Brexit talks. That second phase will focus on
a transition period (discussed here;
and see the draft EU negotiation guidelines here) and
the framework for the post-Brexit relationship between the UK and the EU.
But for now the joint report is
the main issue. It’s a political document, not a legal one, but it’s
practically very relevant to the formal legal process of drawing up the UK’s
withdrawal agreement from the EU, as it sets out many agreed details concerning
key parts of that agreement: citizens’ rights, Irish border issues, the
financial settlement, and ‘winding up’ rules. Some points still need to be
agreed or fleshed out; the formal legal text of the withdrawal agreement must
still be drafted; and any agreement on what happens in the transition period
will have to be added to the withdrawal agreement. Yet yesterday’s deal is
undeniably a milestone, making it rather more likely that a final complete
withdrawal agreement will be agreed.
This blog post focusses on the citizens’
rights points in the deal; I hope to return to examine the other issues in more
detail soon.
Scope of the agreement
The first point to note is that
citizens’ rights are reciprocal: they will cover both EU27 citizens in the UK
and UK citizens in the EU27. Much of the public discussion of this issue focusses
on the former but overlooks the latter; and it is arguable that as result the
joint report overlooks them somewhat too. The UK has come some distance towards
the EU27 position on the issues (see discussion of the parties’ earlier
positions here)
but there are still some elements of compromise.
The joint report indicates that
the parties’ agreement does not cover all
of their citizens, but only those who have ‘exercised free movement rights by
the specified date’. That date is agreed to be Brexit Day (the UK had
originally suggested the date of sending the Article 50 notice, but always
indicated its willingness to negotiate this point). So the withdrawal agreement
will apply to those resident on that date and also (implicitly) those who had
previously been resident but departed briefly from the country they were living
in, in accordance with EU free movement law.
More precisely, the personal
scope of the agreement will be those who reside legally on the territory by
Brexit Day (raising the question of how to define ‘legally’), and their family
members who are defined by the EU citizens’
Directive. Those working as frontier workers on Brexit Day (as defined in
EU law) are also covered. At first sight, this implicitly rules out family
members who are instead covered by the free
movement of workers Regulation (see, for instance, the Czop
and Punakova case), as well as those who returned to a country after leaving it (so-called Surinder Singh cases; see discussion of
the relevant case law here),
and dual citizens, whose position is (like Surinder
Singh cases) defined by analogy
with the citizens’ Directive (see discussion of the relevant recent ECJ ruling here).
However, the joint technical note refers more generally to those who have moved
in accordance with the Treaties – suggesting instead that the final withdrawal
agreement will cover such people.
On the other hand, there’s
nothing to suggest that non-EU family members of British citizens who live in
the UK, who are covered by the ECJ’s Zambrano
case law will be covered (for further explanation of this category of people,
see the discussion of the most recent case law here).
Several issues are explicitly
left to later negotiation, according to the joint technical note: the further
free movement rights of UK citizens living in the EU27; the recognition of
post-Brexit qualifications; future healthcare arrangements (such as the EHIC card
for UK citizens who visit the EU after Brexit, and vice versa); lawyers
practicing under home state title; and posted workers.
Family reunion
For those who seek to be joined
by family members after Brexit Day,
there are limitations compared to the current rules. The current rules on
admission of core family members (spouse, registered partner, children,
dependent parents et al) will apply to those family members who are related to
the relevant EU27 or UK nationals on
Brexit Day already. For those who were not
related on Brexit Day, national law will apply. This will usually be less
generous, either on the UK or the EU27 side (the joint report fails to mention
that 25 of the EU27 – all except Ireland and Denmark – are bound by an EU Directive
on family reunion, which sets minimum standards for the admission of family
members of non-EU citizens). As an exception, however, such national law will
not apply to children born or adopted after Brexit Day. In short, anyone whose
possible future family member’s status might be affected by the change in rules
should probably start shopping for wedding rings – but can keep buying condoms
if they want to.
There’s another change relating
to extended family members. Under the EU citizens’ Directive, Member States must
facilitate the entry of EU citizens’ non-registered
partners, as well as ‘any other family members’ who are dependents, members or
the household, or being cared for by the EU national sponsor. As the ECJ
clarified in Rahman,
this isn’t an obligation to admit all such extended family members, but to
consider applications for their admissions and justify any refusal to admit. But
the joint report states that even this limited right will be curtailed,
applying to partners only, not the other family members referred to. The
partnership must also exist and be durable on Brexit Day; again partnerships
which only start – or only become durable – after that date won’t be covered.
So the agreement will definitely
lower standards that currently apply to family reunion for the persons
concerned, in both the UK and the EU27. For instance, the UK has strict income
requirements for the sponsors of family members, which will apply to EU27
citizens in the UK after Brexit Day, if
they only married their spouse after that date. (Note that these rules will
apply regardless of whether the incoming spouse is non-EU or an EU citizen; and they will also make it harder for many UK citizens to bring an EU spouse to
this country). On the EU27 side, ECJ case law prohibits a high income threshold
for family reunion (see the Chakroun
judgment), but waiting periods before admission are possible. Discrimination
on grounds of nationality will be banned, but in this context this means
migrants will be treated equally badly
to nationals.
Residence rights
Next, the joint report sets out
agreed rules on residence status. The parties may choose to require UK or EU27
citizens respectively to apply for a new residence status under national law.
This is an implicit reference to the UK intention to require all EU citizens to
apply for ‘settled status’ after Brexit, although the EU27 may, if they choose,
impose a parallel requirement on resident UK citizens. There are detailed rules
on simplifying the application process, which in principle apply to both sides
but are actually focussed on the UK side – as confirmed by the footnote
referring to the recent UK technical paper on applying EU27 citizens’
rights after Brexit. The risk here is that the practical difficulties which UK
citizens in the EU27 might face in transferring to national immigration status
in those Member States is being ignored. And again, the EU law on non-EU
citizens which is relevant for some concerned – the long-term
residents’ Directive – goes unmentioned here.
In fact, I recently met a UK
civil servant who admitted that the UK side is not interested in negotiating
about such details, despite the UK government’s public expressions of concern
for UK citizens in the EU27. The awkward fact here is that, due to the inherent
reciprocity in this aspect of the talks, the UK government could not be an
effective advocate for retaining UK citizens’ rights in the EU27 – because of
its primary interest was in curtailing rights of EU27 citizens in the UK. For
instance, it was effectively the UK government which pushed to reduce the
future family reunion rights of UK citizens in the EU27, because of its desire
to apply restrictive UK immigration law to family reunion for EU27 citizens in
the UK in future.
The only solution here for UK
citizens in the EU27 is to push for the EU side to remember their rights –
either by reopening this part of the withdrawal agreement or at least by
pushing for soft or hard law to be agreed within the EU27 side which clarifies
their position and ensures their rights in more detail in EU Member States
after Brexit.
More fundamentally, the EU27 side
has conceded to the UK on the very idea of transferring to national status.
There’s a grace period of two years to apply for such national status – but
what happens to people who don’t apply in time? A genuine notion of ‘acquired
rights’ would mean, at the very least, citizens retaining exactly the same
status they had on Brexit Day; this might also extend to continuing to acquire
status that was in the process of acquisition on Brexit Day. But instead the joint report allows parties
to insist on a transfer to a national status – at the UK’s behest. This
(self-)imposes a significant administrative burden upon the UK, and the recent
error rate of Home Office officials in dealing with EU citizens and non-EU
citizens alike does not inspire confidence. And, as noted already, parallel
concerns may arise wherever UK citizens are required to transfer to a national
status in EU27 states.
The prospect of transferring
status is moreover restricted for some by the concession to the UK of the
possibility of removing people deemed to be abusing rights even before they
have completed judicial redress procedures, as a derogation from existing
protection. It should be noted that the ECJ has already ruled (in the 2014 McCarthy
judgment, discussed here)
that the ‘abuse of rights’ notion cannot be applied to EU citizens’ family
members as easily as the UK government would like. But this still leaves the UK
government leeway to argue that others, such as homeless EU27 citizens, are
covered by the concept and so have less judicial protection once the withdrawal
agreement applies.
Substantively, the joint report
says that the current rules in the EU citizens’ directive will apply to
residence rights and permanent residence. This leaves open the possibility of
refusing permanent residence due to not having ‘comprehensive sickness
insurance’ (CSI) – which in the UK government’s view means that many EU
citizens who are stay-at-home parents or carers fail to qualify, since NHS
coverage is not enough. Although the UK government has promised to waive this
requirement unilaterally, the joint report implicitly accepts that this will not be legally binding as part of the
withdrawal agreement, instead being simply the exercise of the option to apply
more favourable rules than the Directive requires. The future status of these
vulnerable people could therefore be changed at the whim of the UK government.
Those who already have a documented form of permanent residence
will get the new national status free of charge, subject only to a security and
criminality check, and verification of identity and residence. Implicitly those
who are entitled to permanent
residence but who do not have a
document to prove it as of Brexit Day will not be protected by such guarantees.
Nor will those whom the UK deems not entitled to permanent residence yet – such
as the vulnerable people who don’t have CSI as interpreted by the government.
It’s not clear what guarantees will apply to these people instead.
The systematic checks on
criminality would be prohibited under the citizens’ Directive, but will be
allowed under the withdrawal agreement. Moreover, the substantive threshold for
refusing status will change: conduct after Brexit Day will lead to immigration
law consequences in accordance with national law, rather than EU free movement
law. In some cases, this will mean that
offences which would not lead to denial of status under free movement law will
lead to loss of status under national law.
Permanent residence rights
obtained under the withdrawal agreement will, however, be retained for up to
five years’ departure – rather than two years’ departure under the EU citizens’
Directive. Of course, this is in the context of the loss of the underlying free
movement rights – which were previously available as a backup if the right to
permanent residence was lost.
Other rights
The joint report states that UK
and EU27 citizens retain rights under EU social security legislation –
including the EHIC health insurance card – if they have moved before Brexit
Day. There will be an agreed process (yet to be defined) on incorporating
future amendments to EU social security law into the withdrawal agreement.
(Usually a Joint Committee of some kind, made up of officials of parties to a
treaty, is given the power to adopt decisions to amend that treaty in cases
like these).
Equal treatment as regards access
to healthcare and social assistance will be guaranteed in accordance with
existing EU legislation – so the limits on access to such benefits, as
discussed here, will apply too. Qualifications for lawyers and other
regulated professions that have been recognised before Brexit Day will still be
recognised afterwards, and applications for recognition of qualifications
lodged before Brexit Day will still be processed afterwards.
Enforcement of rights
The joint report states that the
withdrawal agreement will go into some detail on enforcement of citizens’
rights – far more so than most international treaties. Citizens must be able to
‘rely directly on their rights’ in the agreement and have laws inconsistent
with the agreement disapplied: these are implicit references to the EU law
concepts of direct effect and supremacy. There’s no limit in time to these
provisions.
More precisely, the UK has
committed to introduce domestic legislation, which will refer explicitly to the
withdrawal agreement and incorporate citizens’ rights directly in national law.
This will prevail over ‘inconsistent or incompatible legislation’, unless
Parliament expressly repeals the Act giving effect to the withdrawal agreement.
This entrenches (but only in the specific field of citizens’ rights) the
existing rule of UK constitutional law relating to the effect of EU law in the
UK legal system: the European
Communities Act gave the courts the (otherwise constitutionally
impossible) power to set aside conflicting Acts of Parliament; implied repeal
of that Act by later Acts of Parliament is not possible, but express repeal
is.
EU27 citizens may be suspicious
of Parliament’s power of express repeal regarding Act giving effect to the
withdrawal agreement, but it represents no change from the status quo as an EU Member State. It would be constitutionally (and
surely politically) impossible to ask the UK to overrule this power, giving the
withdrawal agreement some sort of super-hierarchical legal status. Subject to
vague murmurings from the courts, for the UK* the only basic law is that there
is no basic law. (*except Scotland).
But what happens if the UK
parliament did expressly repeal EU27
citizens’ rights? That would then be a matter for the dispute settlement
provisions of the withdrawal agreement, which are likely to provide for some
sort of sanction at international level in the event that, following some form
of arbitration process, it is found that either side has breached its
obligations under the agreement. The dispute settlement issue will be part of
the ‘governance’ aspects of the withdrawal agreement, which have yet to be
agreed; but the joint report explicitly notes that the aspects of citizens’
rights agreed so far is ‘without prejudice’ to the further discussion of such
issues. Ideally there will be some sort
of at least indirect access by EU27 and UK citizens to this dispute settlement
process, for instance by means of a complaint and request to trigger that
system that has to be considered and answered by the UK or EU authorities.
As for the EU27 side, the joint
report states simply that the withdrawal agreement will bind the EU and its
Member States in accordance with the Treaties. This does not as such give
effect to the withdrawal agreement in the domestic law of the EU and its Member
States, but it is probably assumed that the withdrawal agreement will have
direct effect in EU law. ECJ case law suggests that some international treaties
have direct effect in EU law, but some do not, depending on the nature and
purpose of each agreement.
By comparison with Demirel,
where the ECJ accepted direct effect for the EU/Turkey association agreement
that conferred fewer rights and did not guarantee reciprocal direct effect on
the Turkish side, the withdrawal agreement is very likely to satisfy the test
for direct effect in EU law. But for the avoidance of any doubt – and to ensure
reciprocity from the outset – the withdrawal agreement should explicitly set
out both parties’ intention to secure direct effect and supremacy of the
citizens’ rights rules in their respective legal orders (on the relevance of
the parties’ intentions, see Kupferberg).
Jurisdiction of the ECJ
It would be possible to leave it
to the courts of each side to guarantee rights established by the withdrawal
agreement, particularly in light of the strong provisions on enforcement of
those rights in domestic legal systems. However, the EU27 side was particularly
keen to ensure some continuing role for the ECJ.
There are several aspects to the
ECJ’s role. First of all, where the withdrawal agreement refers to concepts of
EU law – and the joint report indicates that it often will – those concepts
will be interpreted in accordance with ECJ case law delivered before Brexit
Day. This is consistent with the EU
Withdrawal Bill before the UK Parliament (discussed here),
although that Bill also provides that the UK Parliament, executive or Supreme
Court might decide to depart from such ‘retained’ case law. As discussed further
above, the parties have agreed to limit such departures as regards the status
of EU27 citizens in the UK.
There’s no limit in time to the
obligation to rely on this pre-existing case law, and doing so will ensure
greater legal certainty. For instance, there will be no need, to litigate from
scratch how to define an EU27 or UK ‘worker’ or when a relevant family member
is ‘dependent’, since there is ECJ case law to rely upon (for instance, see here
and here
respectively).
Secondly, the joint report states
that the UK courts will have to have ‘due regard’ to ECJ judgments issued after Brexit Day. This goes further than
the UK’s Withdrawal Bill, which would only give an option to courts in the UK
to take account of the ECJ’s post-Brexit case law; although (as discussed here)
the UK government had previously signalled its willingness to agree to such an
approach as regards civil law. Again, there’s no limit in time to this
obligation.
Thirdly, the withdrawal agreement
should specify that courts or tribunals in the UK could ask the ECJ to rule on
a provision of the withdrawal agreement concerning citizens’ rights, if there
is no clear case law on the issue, if the litigation brought (presumably before
a court in the UK) within a period of eight years after the ‘date of
application’ (a concept not further defined) of the citizens’ rights part of
the agreement. Note that this differs from the current rules in that the UK
Supreme Court will not be obliged to
send questions to the ECJ; although it retains the current rule that any other
national court or tribunal may do so.
The joint report does not state that the ECJ’s rulings in such cases will bind
the national court, although the ECJ has made clear that whenever it has
jurisdiction, even as regards non-EU countries, its rulings must be binding (see Opinion
1/00, for instance).
Fourthly, in common with some
other international treaties which the EU has signed, there will be an exchange
of case law between the two sides, and the right of intervention of the UK
before the ECJ. Unusually, there will be a parallel right of the Commission to
intervene before UK courts and tribunals.
Finally, the UK will set up an
‘independent national authority’ to monitor the implementation of this part of
the withdrawal agreement, with the details to be discussed further in the next
phase. It remains to be seen whether it will have the same power as the
Commission has on the EU27 side to consider complaints from individuals and to
bring proceedings in the courts in the UK to enforce EU27 citizens’ rights. There’s
no time limit on the final two points.
Taken as a whole, these
provisions are remarkably similar to the rules set out in the Treaty
establishing the European
Economic Area, which links Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein to EU internal
market law and some other EU policies. Most notably, the rules on previous and
subsequent ECJ case law are identical, as are the rules on exchange of case law
and judicial intervention (if we substitute the courts in the UK for the EFTA
Court). It’s not yet clear if the UK ‘independent authority’ will be as similar
to the Commission as the EFTA Surveillance Authority is, but its very existence
is a step in the direction of the EEA model.
And the joint report goes further than the EEA in requiring that UK
courts must be able to ask the ECJ questions (the EEA only gives EEA states an
option to allow this – but then it provides for an EFTA Court instead of the
ECJ). While this ‘one-country EEA’ model will only (for now) apply to the
specific field of EU27 citizens’ rights, it might end up as a template also for
the transitional rules and future relationship which the UK and EU27 will
discuss next.
Conclusions
Some have suggested that any ‘special’
rights for EU27 citizens in the UK are objectionable, comparing them to the
status of colonial occupiers or to the application of US gun laws in the UK.
These comparisons are frankly absurd. The joint report refers only to retaining
some aspects of a pre-existing
immigration status. To compare keeping legally acquired status (again, reciprocally for UK citizens in
the EU27) to the position of an invading power’s citizens is beyond offensive; to
compare it to a foreign country’s violent constitutional quirks is simply random.
And citizens of the UK’s former colonies may recall that Britain exported to
them not only railways and parliaments, but also famines and massacres.
Moreover, to the extent that the
joint report states that the withdrawal agreement will guarantee the acquired
rights of EU27 and UK citizens’ rights, it only gives effect to what many Leave supporters purported to advocate during
the referendum. In particular, a Daily
Telegraph article
by Leave campaigners (widely disseminated during the referendum) asserted that
international law would automatically guarantee full acquired rights for UK
citizens living in the EU27 states. The official Leave campaign likewise promised
to guarantee ‘no less favourable rights’ for EU27 citizens in the UK. These
outrageous guarantees had been promised by the very people now outraged by
them.
From the opposite perspective,
many EU27 and UK citizens are disappointed by the joint report. For those UK
citizens who haven’t moved within the EU and who are dismayed by the thought of
losing free movement rights, their complaint lies with the UK government, which
assumed that the Leave vote was a vote to end the free movement of persons. For
those who complain that people born in Northern Ireland will have EU free
movement rights (due to their Irish citizenship) whereas most people born in
the rest of the UK will not, the situation is created by Irish citizenship law;
the withdrawal agreement will only recognise the existence of that rule, not
create it. Of course, the distinction between UK and Irish citizenship will
matter more after Brexit; but that simply brings us back to the UK government’s
intention to end free movement.
As for those who have moved,
there are parts of the joint report that should be welcomed, and parts where
they have good grounds for concern. While the joint report does not itself
create rights, that was inevitable given that the parties have decided not to
‘ring fence’ the citizens’ rights issue in a separate treaty. UK and EU27
citizens should keep lobbying for this to take place, as it would especially be
necessary if the Article 50 talks subsequently collapse, as they still might
(though this now seems rather less likely).
As to the substance of rights, a
number of key guarantees ensuring many aspects of acquired rights will be
retained are set out in the joint report. There are many important provisions
on the administrative process and enforcement of rights too.
However, there are grounds for concern,
as I discussed above, about the most vulnerable: the homeless who will lose
effective appeal rights and the carers whose rights will depend on the fragile
goodwill of the UK government – a whim which could change overnight in response
to some angry vomit spewed by a tabloid newspaper. UK citizens in the EU27 are
in limbo as regards future free movement rights; and because the UK government
values an irrational migration target more than the family lives of
working-class British citizens who fall in love with foreigners, the future
family lives of lower income EU27 citizens must equally suffer.
While many EU27 citizens in the
UK might prefer to keep the role of the ECJ indefinitely, there are a number of
other enforcement guarantees for them in the withdrawal agreement that are not
subject to any time limit. Any ECJ link with the courts of a non-EU country for
any period of time is already exceptional. While the behaviour of the Home
Office sometimes gives rise to understandable doubts, by definition a rule of
law problem cannot be solved by demanding another court – especially a foreign
court whose rulings will provoke greater opposition from nationalists than a
domestic court. It needs to be solved by making the case for the rule of law –
and the substantive case for EU citizens’ acquired rights – at the domestic
level, coupled with an effective dispute settlement system if necessary at the
international level.
Overall, the value of yesterday’s
agreement also lies in the increased prospect that there will be a final deal
on these issues at all – since ‘no deal’ could well leave them worse off than
this planned compromise. But it is not
too late to advocate for improvements that would more fully ensure that the
millions of UK and EU27 citizens who moved before Brexit Day will not have
their lives ruined as a result of the Brexit process.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 13;
chapter 27
Photo credit: vice sports
* *This blog post was supported by an ESRC Priority Brexit Grant on 'Brexit and UK and EU Immigration Policy'
* *This blog post was supported by an ESRC Priority Brexit Grant on 'Brexit and UK and EU Immigration Policy'
Great analysis. As you've mentioned, UK government sought to restrict so many rights of EU citizens knowing full well this would limit their own citizen's rights in EU27, they simply don't care about us.
ReplyDeleteThis idea of reciprocity extending only to residence is one of our biggest objections: we will lose FoM in 26 countries whereas EU27 citizens in the UK will still enjoy FoM in the same number of countries. Is such rights-stripping 'reciprocal' and fair? I think not.
David raised onward movement rights before and the EU said they wanted to look at it later. What a shame the UK government considered this a secondary point and sold us down the river to get what they wanted.
What you haven't mentioned is the lack of FOM for UK Citizens living in the EU, if this is not agreed we are stuck in our country of residence, which will be catastrophic for those who travel round the EU for work
ReplyDeleteI mention this at the end of the 'scope' section. Negotiations on this are meant to continue. I agree that's it's important that they are successful for UK citizens.
DeleteIt would be good if this would be addressed in the future cooperation agreement.
DeleteHowever, the EU gives a vast set of rights for 3rd country nationals (after Brexit including UK citizens) residing in the EU, including the right to move freely.
Third country nationals can travel within the Schengen states but there's no general right for them to move to other Member States and reside there on the same basis that EU citizens can.
DeleteYou write: "For those UK citizens who haven’t moved within the EU and who are dismayed by the thought of losing free movement rights, their complaint lies with the UK government." The guarantee of free movement was not made by the UK government, but by the EU. It is part of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. If European Citizenship is a 'fundamental' right, reciprocity doesn't come into it. The EU voluntarily made undertakings to all its citizens, and it has no more case to be excused from those obligations than the UK government has a case to be excused from the financial obligations it voluntarily undertook. The EU should be extending to UK citizens the equivalent of the Irish Republic's offer to those born in Northern Ireland.
ReplyDeleteThe Treaties confer EU citizenship on nationals of Member States. The UK will cease to be a Member State and it is the UK government's choice not to seek a continuing free movement of persons agreement like Norway or Switzerland.
DeleteThe Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU was approved by the Lisbon Treaty, but it is not itself a treaty; it is a declaration of European law, defining the scope of European citizenship. The EU notes that the Charter is much wider than the treaties: it "entrenches:
Delete* all the rights found in the case law of the Court of Justice of the EU;
* the rights and freedoms enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights;
* other rights and principles resulting from the common constitutional traditions of EU countries and other international instruments."
This is nothing like the treaty agreement with Norway. The whole point of the Charter was to emphasise the direct relationship of the EU to its citizens. The Charter sets out a series of individual rights and freedoms, including the rights of citizenship, which have equal status to other rights. For as long as the Charter remains law, it is binding on the European Union in its own right.
The Charter doesn't alter the Treaty definition of citizenship of the EU:see Article 52.2. If a Member State leaves the EU, its nationals are no longer EU citizens.
DeleteA very detailed and interseting article but I must admit I am even more confused than before. I have lived in the EU(mainland so to speak) for more than 25 years and in Germany for more than 20. Does his mean that after Brexit day that I am 'trapped' in Gremany and cannot even to to, for example, the Netherlands for a holiday without applying for a visa and, more importantly, not be able to return to Germany. Like everyone else I just want to retain free movement rights. Just what is going to happen, especially as it seems that the UK government does not give a hoot about us.
ReplyDeleteRegards
Stephen Motzkeit
The full free movement issue remains to be negotiated but any UK citizens living in Schengen states with a residence permit can travel within Schengen states for three months without a visa according to Schengen rules.
DeleteAny idea how this may affect those of us who are cross-border workers within the Schengen zone - specifically those of us who live in France or Germany and commute into Switzerland for work (frontaliers)?
DeleteBest,
Ben
That depends on what happens to EU/Swiss treaties as regards the UK after Brexit.
DeleteHi Steve,
ReplyDeleteWhat does this mean for Surinder Singh family members i.e will they have to apply under UK immigration rules if they have not accured 5 years residence by the time we leave?
As the blog post says in the "scope" section it isn't clear if Singh cases will be covered. We have to wait for the draft legal texts to see.
DeleteThe EU and the UK have both sold the 4 million out . Shame on them .
ReplyDeleteThe 4 million wanted to be EU when it suited them and British when it didn't, at the same time. i.e. have their whole cake and eat it.
ReplyDeleteWhat an exceptionally stupid comment. Both groups want to retain the rights which they had when they moved, since they have based their life around the rules which applied at the time. They were promised no change in their position by the Leave side in the referendum - one of the most vicious lies that was told.
DeleteIs there anything about voting rights in the report? Will EU citizens retain their vote in local elections or will they be treated, as they should, like all other non-Commonwealth citizens and lose it?
ReplyDeleteThere's no mention of voting rights.
DeleteSteve,
ReplyDeleteAs always you provide a very good analysis of matters concerning EU law.
I was reading the joint teschnical note and it refers to the protection of rights of EU citizens and UK nationals who are resident in the UK in accordance with Article 21 TFEU. Does this refer to Surinder Singh and Lounes cases?
In a Surinder Singh context, as I understand in O and B Netherlands the CJEU court says when an EU national returns to the Member State of his origin he is entitled to rely on on Article 21 TFEU to continue the family life which was created or strenghthened in the Host Member State.
The wording mentions UK nationals so I'm assuming Surinder Singh rights of residence will be protected even though there is no explicit mention of the case?
As I say in the "scope" section that's what I think the technical report means. But we need to see a draft legal text to be sure.
DeleteThank you for a very informative article. I'm someone who is in danger of being completely caught out by this - I was planning a move to France in the medium term (5 years - retirement!) but it looks like this won't be possible keeping healthcare rights....also I've an aunt who has lived in central Portugal for 13 years and I'm her closest relative (she doesn't have children) but it doesnt' look like that's close enough family to benefit from family rights. Should I remortgage the house and try to quickly buy a residence in France before B-day in 2019?? Arghh!!
ReplyDeleteI can't give advice in individual cases but it may be relevant that a two year 'status quo' transitional period is the next topic for discussion.
DeleteProf Peers, thanks for the best analysis of the situation I’ve seen. As you say ‘legally’ is not defined in the term ‘legally resident’. And to me, it is not actually clear what ‘resident’ means either! So for example, would I need to be a tax resident in an EU27 country on Brexit date (Spain in my case) to be a ‘resident’ of that country? Or are there some other criteria? Many thanks, Rich
ReplyDeleteI assume that 'legally' resident will be defined by reference to existing free movement law but the fine print on this point in the Withdrawal Agreement will be essential.
DeleteGreat analysis, thanks! As afar as CSI is concerned, I believe that EU citizens who receive a State Pension from their county of origin are considered as if they had CSI. However, I think that this should be clearly mentioned in the requirements to acquire the right to reside. What's your opinion on this matter? Thank you. Laura
ReplyDeleteI haven't heard of this - do you have a reference?
DeleteYes I have, personally. I have been considered as a qualified person who is self -sufficient, treated as holding CSI, as in receipt of an Italian State Pension, for a period of 5 years and thus gained permanent right of residence.
ReplyDeleteIf you already have a document to show permanent residence on the basis of EU free movement law then the UK government says you will have to make an application for settled status but approval will in principle be nearly automatic.
DeleteFor some reason I can't see my answer. I'll do it again. Yes I have obtained a permanent residence permit "as a self-sufficient person, in receipt of an Italian State Pension and for that I'm treated as holding a CSI". Laura
ReplyDeleteThat's good to know but the CSI requirement hasn't been clarified much by case law.
DeletePursuant to Regulation 883/2004 those in receipt of a state pension from their home member state are entitled to healthcare cover in their host Member State at the expense of their home country. The pensioner must request Form S1 from their home country and present it to the authorities of their host country as evidence CSI. Thus all EU pensioners resident in the UK who receive a state pension from their home MS should be able to satisfy the CSI requirement in the UK.
DeleteI also have dual citizenship, both UK and Italian. My point was about CSI for EU citizens who receive A State Pension from their country of origin, as is not clear in the regulations. Thanks for your comments. Laura
ReplyDeleteWhy is this site censuring comments?
ReplyDeleteI asked a question about Surinder Singh and its not been answered even though there are messages after I had posted.
Sorry for that. I filter comments to clear out the vast amount of spam including witch doctors and links to child porn. Also sometimes Blogger has glitches so I don't see all comments at first. I have now replied to the Surinder Singh questions.
DeleteVery comprehensive text but what anyone has failed to enlighten me beyond doubt is what is the status of anyone that settles into Britain between now and Brexit day. Can you provide me clues on that?
ReplyDeleteAs I mentioned, the agreed cut off date is Brexit Day (subject to any transition agreement which might delay the cut off date).
DeleteThank you for the enlightenment. This thing is so complex one gets tangled in the wording even when term are put in a straightforward way!
DeleteHi Steve.
ReplyDeleteAs born british citizen with dual nationality (Cypriot) and lived in Cyprus for 25 years and returned 4 years ago would i be able to bring a EU family member to the uk ?
I can't advise on individual cases. Dual citizens who have moved within the EU are in principle covered by EU free movement law but there might be issues if there has been a gap since moving. If the transitional rules, as proposed, extend EU free movement law, then there would be a further period to do this. It's also possible that an EU citizen family member can claim a right to free movement (while it lasts) in his or her own name.
DeleteWe have lived in Germany for 23 years and had hoped to move to Vienna when my husband retires in two years time. Will this still be possible and do you consider it advisable, considering the length of time we have lived in Germany? Julia Ogilvie
ReplyDeleteIf the transitional period is agreed as planned and includes a continuation of free movement rules until the end of 2020, then UK citizens could move between Member states until the end of that time, subject to compliance with the rules that would ordinarily apply. Retirees have to show sufficient resources and have comprehensive health insurance. The EU27 position is that people who move within the transitional period would keep acquired rights at the end of it: that would equally apply to UK citizens who moved between EU27 states during that period.
DeleteThe recent joint report on Brexit negotiations marks a significant step toward establishing a withdrawal agreement, particularly concerning citizens' rights. While it offers a framework for EU27 and UK citizens, key issues remain unresolved, such as the definition of "legally residing" and the application of family reunion rights post-Brexit. The reciprocal nature of citizens' rights is crucial, yet the report appears to prioritize EU citizens in the UK, potentially sidelining UK citizens in the EU. The emphasis on a transition period and ongoing negotiations suggests a complex path ahead, underscoring the need for clarity and protection of rights for all affected individuals.
ReplyDeleteThe withdrawal agreement very clearly applies to both UK citizens in the EU and EU citizens in the UK.
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