Professor Steve
Peers, University of Essex*
The
issue of the acquired rights of EU27 and UK citizens has long been a focus of
this blog. It’s also one of the key issues in the debate over Brexit. I’m
revisiting the issue now that there is a proposed
revised withdrawal agreement, which consists of a revised
Protocol on the Irish border (for a full text of the revised withdrawal
agreement following this change, see here)
and a revised
political declaration on the future relationship.
This
is the fourth in a series of blog posts about the revised withdrawal agreement.
The previous posts contained an overview
of the agreement, examined the transition
period and looked at dispute
settlement. (Update: a fifth post, published later, analyses the related political declaration). This is an update of a blog
post published last year, concerning a draft of the earlier version of the
withdrawal agreement. (Note
that the health law implications of the earlier drafts of this part of the
agreement were already discussed here by
Professor Tamara Hervey, who proposed some additional amendments).
Note
that the transition period is particularly relevant to UK citizens in the EU27
and EU27 citizens in the EU, since free movement law would continue to apply
during this period. Also there are special rules on dispute settlement for EU27
citizens in the UK (eight years jurisdiction for the CJEU to rule on these
issues after the end of the transition period, and a monitoring body to help
protect their rights). See the separate
blog posts for more on each of these issues. (Update, May 2020: see also the detailed EU Commission guidance on the interpretation of the citizens' rights provisions).
Summary
This
blog post is a detailed annotation of this part of the withdrawal agreement.
The main points are that the agreement would preserve most of the acquired
rights of EU27 citizens who moved to the UK, and UK citizens who moved to the
EU27, before the end of the transition period (which would be the end of 2020,
with a possible extension of up to two years).
This
would put the persons concerned in a better position than under a no deal
situation, in which case they would be subject to national law (and some EU law
on the EU27 side), with no comprehensive international treaty framework to
underpin those rights. However, in some respects they would be worse than under
a continuation of EU membership: there’s a time limit on using more favourable
family reunion rights and on return if they leave their country of residence,
plus UK citizens lose free movement rights to another Member State, even if
they are resident in one already. (UK citizens in the EU27 can try to qualify
for a more limited mobility right under the EU’s long-term residence directive,
discussed here).
Structure
of the withdrawal agreement
Part
Two of the withdrawal agreement, and is the main focus of this blogpost. But I
also annotate here the closely connected Part One, setting out the “Common
Provisions”. The remaining titles concern “separation provisions” (Part Three);
the transition (or implementation) period (Part Four, the subject of a separate
blog post); the financial settlement (Part Five); and the “Final Provisions” in
Part Six (also mostly the subject of a separate blog post, which covers the
dispute settlement Articles in Part Six). There are also Protocols on the Irish
border, Cyprus and Gibraltar.
Within
Part Two, there are four titles:
- Title
I on General Provisions (Articles 9-12), which covers
definitions, personal scope, continuity of residence, and non-discrimination;
- Title
II on Rights and Obligations (Articles 13-27), with Chapter 1
on residence rights and documents (Articles 13-23), covering entry and exit
rights, residence rights, status, the application process, safeguards and
appeal rights, related rights and equal treatment; Chapter 2 on the
rights of workers and self-employed persons (Articles 24-26), Chapter 3 on
professional qualifications (Articles 27-29);
- Title
III on Social Security (Articles 30-36); and
- Title
IV on Other Rights (Articles 37-39).
*This blog post was supported by an
ESRC Priority Brexit Grant on 'Brexit and UK and EU Immigration Policy'
Barnard & Peers: chapter 27,
chapter 13
Photo credit: the Guardian
Annex
– revised withdrawal agreement, Parts One and Two, annotated
PREAMBLE
THE
EUROPEAN UNION AND THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND,
[…]
HAVE
AGREED AS FOLLOWS:
PART ONE
COMMON PROVISIONS
Article 1
Objective
This
Agreement sets out the arrangements for the withdrawal of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland ("United Kingdom") from the
European Union (“Union”) and from the European Atomic Energy Community
(“Euratom”).
Comment: Note the withdrawal from Euratom as well as the
EU. This is hard, if not impossible, to avoid, for the reasons I discuss here.
Article 2
Definitions
For
the purposes of this Agreement, the following definitions shall apply:
(a) "Union
law" means:
(i)
the Treaty on European Union ("TEU"), the Treaty on the Functioning
of the European Union ("TFEU") and the Treaty establishing the
European Atomic Energy Community ("Euratom Treaty"), as amended or
supplemented, as well as the Treaties of Accession and the Charter of
Fundamental Rights of the European Union, together referred to as “the
Treaties”;
(ii)
the general principles of the Union’s law;
(iii)
the acts adopted by the institutions, bodies, offices or agencies of the Union;
(iv)
the international agreements to which the Union is party and the international
agreements concluded by the Member States acting on behalf of the Union;
(v)
the agreements between Member States entered into in their capacity as Member
States of the Union;
(vi)
acts of the Representatives of the Governments of the Member States meeting
within the European Council or the Council of the European Union
("Council");
(vii)
the declarations made in the context of intergovernmental conferences which
adopted the Treaties;
(b)
"Member States" means the Kingdom of Belgium, the Republic of
Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, the Kingdom of Denmark, the Federal Republic of
Germany, the Republic of Estonia, Ireland, the Hellenic Republic, the Kingdom
of Spain, the French Republic, the Republic of Croatia, the Italian Republic,
the Republic of Cyprus, the Republic of Latvia, the Republic of Lithuania, the
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, Hungary, the Republic of Malta, the Kingdom of the
Netherlands, the Republic of Austria, the Republic of Poland, the Portuguese
Republic, Romania, the Republic of Slovenia, the Slovak Republic, the Republic
of Finland and the Kingdom of Sweden;
(c)
"Union citizen" means any person holding the nationality of a Member
State;
(d)
"United Kingdom national" means a national of the United Kingdom, as
defined in the New Declaration by the Government of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland of 31 December 1982 on the definition of the term
‘nationals’ together with Declaration No 63 annexed to the Final Act of the
intergovernmental conference which adopted the Treaty of Lisbon;
(e) “transition period” means the period
provided in Article 126;
(f) "day" means a calendar day, unless otherwise
provided in this Agreement or in provisions of Union law made applicable by
this Agreement.
Comments: The definition of “Union law” in Article 2(a) is
clarified further in Article 5. It is particularly relevant for Article 4(4),
which requires that CJEU case law on Union law before the end of the
transition/implementation period must be applicable.
The
definition of “Member States” in (b) is straightforward, although Article 7 and
the transition period provisions then go on to define the UK as a Member State
for many purposes. Note that the definition is “frozen” by reference to the
current EU27 countries; the UK would thus not be bound to protect the rights of
citizens of countries that join the EU in future (logically enough, since they
do not have EU law rights to protect at the time of the UK’s withdrawal).
Conversely, the UK would be bound to keep protecting the
rights of citizens of any other countries that might leave the
EU.
Since
the withdrawal agreement does not cover the position of citizens of non-EU
countries whose migration status may derive from EU law, besides family members
of EU27/UK citizens, their position depends upon the “rolling over” of any such
treaties so that they continue to apply to the UK during the transition period,
and then separately after that date.
Point
(c) confirms the orthodox view that UK citizens lose their EU citizenship upon
Brexit day, since the Treaties state that only nationals of Member States are
citizens of the EU. However, it should be noted that this interpretation was challenged.
Point
(d) refers to UK declarations on the exact scope of its citizenship. The CJEU
has ruled on this issue in the Kaur case,
accepting the UK’s decision to define various groups of people as not actually
UK citizens.
As
for point (e), as noted above the transition period ends at the end of 2020,
with the possibility of an extension up to one or two years.
Article 3
1. Unless
otherwise provided in this Agreement or in Union law made applicable by this
Agreement, any reference in this Agreement to the United Kingdom or its
territory, shall be understood as referring to:
(a) the
United Kingdom;
(b) Gibraltar, to the extent that Union law was applicable to
it before the date of entry into force of this Agreement;
(c) the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man, to the extent
that Union law was applicable to them before the date of entry into force of
this Agreement;
(d) the Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia in
Cyprus, to the extent necessary to ensure the implementation of the
arrangements set out in the Protocol on the Sovereign Base Areas of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland in Cyprus annexed to the Act
concerning the conditions of accession of the Czech Republic, the Republic of
Estonia, the Republic of Cyprus, the Republic of Latvia, the Republic of
Lithuania, the Republic of Hungary, the Republic of Malta, the Republic of Poland,
the Republic of Slovenia and the Slovak Republic to the European Union;
(e) the overseas countries and territories listed in Annex II
to the TFEU having special relations with the United Kingdom, where the
provisions of this Agreement relate to the special arrangements for the
association of the overseas countries and territories with the Union.
2. Unless otherwise provided in this Agreement or in Union
law made applicable by this Agreement, any reference in this Agreement to
Member States, or their territory, shall be understood as covering the
territories of the Member States to which the Treaties apply as provided in
Article 355 TFEU.
Comment:
Article 355 TFEU refers to the territorial scope of the Treaties. Alongside
the UK in point (1)(a), point (1)(d) includes cross-references to accession
treaties as regards the status of the Cyprus bases. The withdrawal agreement has
a separate protocol on these bases. Other territories will be affected by the
withdrawal agreement to the extent they are covered by EU law already, which
they are in part in different ways. For instance, see the CJEU judgment
in Buhagiar,
on which part of EU law applies in Gibraltar.
As for the
overseas countries and territories in (1)(e), a footnote lists them as: Anguilla, Bermuda, British Antarctic Territory, British Indian Ocean
Territory, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Falkland Islands,
Montserrat, Pitcairn, Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha, South
Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, and Turks and Caicos Islands.
|
Article 4
Methods and principles relating to the effect, the
implementation and the application of this Agreement
1. The provisions of this Agreement and the provisions of
Union law made applicable by this Agreement shall produce in respect of and in
the United Kingdom the same legal effects as those which they produce within
the Union and its Member States.
Accordingly, legal or natural persons shall in particular be
able to rely directly on the provisions contained or referred to in this
Agreement which meet the conditions for direct effect under Union law.
2.
The United Kingdom shall ensure compliance with paragraph 1, including as
regards the required powers of its judicial and administrative authorities to disapply inconsistent or
incompatible domestic provisions,
through domestic primary legislation.
3. The provisions of this Agreement referring to Union law or
to concepts or provisions thereof shall be interpreted and applied in
accordance with the methods and general principles of Union law.
4. The provisions of this Agreement referring to Union law or
to concepts or provisions thereof shall in their implementation and application
be interpreted in conformity with the relevant case law of the Court of Justice
of the European Union handed down before the end of the transition period.
5. In the interpretation and application of this Agreement,
the United Kingdom's judicial and administrative authorities shall have due
regard to relevant case law of the Court of Justice of the European Union
handed down after the end of the transition period.
Comments: Article 4 aims to reproduce the legal effect of
EU law covered by the withdrawal agreement within the UK domestic legal order.
It is particularly important for the transition period and for the citizens’
rights provisions. Note the obligation to adopt primary legislation to give
effect to the agreement, which would be the subject of an Act of Parliament in
the event that the UK heads for ratification.
Article
4(3) is a general provision, supplemented by the following two paras, on the
interpretation of the entire agreement in conformity with EU law principles.
Article 4(4) means that CJEU case law up until the end of the transition period
will be binding. Note that Article 2(a) defines “Union law” for the purposes of
the agreement; Article 5 clarifies this issue further.
Article
4(5), on the other hand, gives only a persuasive effect to CJEU case law after
that point. Note, however, that the CJEU has special jurisdiction over
citizens’ rights for eight years after the end of the transition period.
Note
that the Protocol on Ireland applies some provisions of Article 4 to that
Protocol, but has different rules for others.
ARTICLE 5
Good faith
The Union and the
United Kingdom shall, in full mutual respect and good faith, assist each other
in carrying out tasks which flow from this Agreement.
They shall take all
appropriate measures, whether general or particular, to ensure fulfilment of
the obligations arising from this Agreement and shall refrain from any measures
which could jeopardise the attainment of the objectives of this Agreement.
This Article is
without prejudice to the application of Union law pursuant to this Agreement,
in particular the principle of sincere cooperation.
Comments: Article 5 is similar to the good faith provisions
that apply to Member States. This provision, however, only relates to the
withdrawal agreement.
Article 6
References to Union law
1. With the exception of Parts Four and Five, unless
otherwise provided in this Agreement all references in this Agreement to Union
law shall be understood as references to Union law, including as amended or
replaced, as applicable on the last day of the transition period.
2. Where in this Agreement reference is made to Union acts or
provisions thereof, such reference shall, where relevant, be understood to
include a reference to Union law or provisions thereof that, although replaced
or superseded by the act referred to, continue to apply in accordance with that
act.
3. For the purposes of this Agreement, references to
provisions of Union law made applicable by this Agreement shall be understood
to include references to the relevant Union acts supplementing or implementing
those provisions.
Comments: Effectively Article 5 supplements the definition
of “Union law” in article 2(a), and the two provisions should be read together.
It is also very relevant to the interpretation rules in Article 4. The
exception in Article 5(1) for Parts Four and Five of the agreement refers to
the transition period and the financial settlements rules; the exception
“unless otherwise provided in this Agreement” refers to changes such as the
amendments to social security rules, referred to in Part Two on citizens’
rights, and the Protocol on Ireland, which has a different rule than Article 6(1).
As
regards citizens’ rights, the following provisions of Union law are
referred to: Article 2(2), Directive 2004/38 (Articles 9(a) and 10(1)(e));
Articles 45 and 49 TFEU (Article 9(b)); Article 2(9), Regulation 2201/2003
(Article 9(e)); Articles 12, 13, 16(2), 17 and 18, Directive 2004/38 (Article 10(1)(f));
Article 3(2), Directive 2004/38 (Article 10(2) and (3)); Article 18 TFEU
(Article 12); Articles 21, 45 or 49 TFEU and in Article 6(1), Article 7(1)(a),
(b) or (c), Article 7(3), Article 14, Article 16(1) or Article 17(1) of
Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 13(1)); Article 21 TFEU and in Article 6(1),
Article 7(1)(d), Article 12(1) or (3), Article 13(1), Article 14, Article 16(1)
or Article 17(3) and (4) of Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 13(2)); Articles 4(1)
and 5 (1), Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 14(1)); Articles 16, 17 and 18,
Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 15(1)); Articles 16(3) and 21, Directive
2004/38/EC (Article 15(2)); Article 7, Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 16);
Articles 2(2)(c) or (d), 3(2), 7(1)(a), (b) and (c) and (2), 8(3), (4) and (5),
10(2), 19, 20 and 27(3), Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 18); Chapter VI and
Articles 31 and 35, Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 19); Article 15 and Chapter
VI of Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 20); Article 23 of Directive 2004/38/EC
(Article 21); Article
24 of Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 22(1)); Articles 6 and 14(4)(b) of
Directive 2004/38/EC (Article 22(2)); Article 45 TFEU and Regulation 492/2011
(Article 23); Article 49 TFEU (Article 24(1)); Directives 2005/36, 98/5,
2006/43 and 74/556 (Articles 26 and 27); Regulations 1231/2010 and 859/2003
(Article 29); Regulations 883/2004 and 987/2009 (Articles 29, 30 and 32);
Article 7
References to Member States
For
the purposes of this Agreement, all references to Member States and competent
authorities of Member States in provisions of Union law made applicable by this
Agreement shall be read as including the United Kingdom and its competent
authorities, except as regards:
(a)
the nomination, appointment or election of members of the institutions, bodies,
offices and agencies of the Union, as well as the participation in the
decision-making and the attendance in the meetings of the institutions;
(b) the
participation in the decision-making and governance of the bodies, offices and
agencies of the Union;
(c) the
attendance in the meetings of the committees referred to in Article 3(2)
of Regulation
(EU) No 182/2011 of the European Parliament and of the Council, of
Commission expert groups or of other similar entities, or in the meetings of
expert groups or similar entities of bodies, offices and agencies of the Union,
unless otherwise provided in this Agreement.
2. Unless otherwise provided in this Agreement, any reference
to the Union shall be understood as including Euratom.
Comment: While the definition of “Member States” in
Article 2(b) excludes the UK, Article 7 then qualifies that significantly by
effectively making the UK a Member State as regards the substantive law of the
EU, but not the institutional law of the EU, for the purposes of the withdrawal
agreement.
The
provisions on the transition period go into more details on this point. There are
also derogations from Article 7 in as regards some financial settlement issues
and in the Protocol on Ireland.
While
the Treaties only refer to Member States as having a full decision-making role
within EU institutions, there is nothing to rule out consultation with
non-Member States. Indeed, the Schengen association agreement with Norway and
Iceland gives them consultation rights at ministerial level. The notion that
the UK is expected to apply new EU law (see Article 6) without even being
informally consulted on the relevant proposals is therefore problematic.
Article 8
Access to network and information systems and data
bases
Unless otherwise provided in this Agreement, at the end of
the transition period the United Kingdom shall cease to be entitled to access
any network, any information system and any database established on the basis
of Union law. The United Kingdom shall take appropriate measures to ensure that
it does not access a network, information system or database which it is no
longer entitled to access.
Comment: This ends the UK’s access to databases and information
systems – particularly relevant to justice and home affairs issues – at the end
of the transition period. It would be possible to continue access on the basis
of a future security treaty, as discussed here.
There are derogations from this Article in several provisions.
PART TWO
CITIZENS’ RIGHTS
TITLE I
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 9
Definitions
For
the purposes of this Part, and without prejudice to Title III, the following
definitions shall apply:
(a)
"family members" means the following persons, irrespective of their
nationality, who fall within the personal scope provided for in Article 10 of
this Agreement:
(i) family members of Union citizens or family
members of United Kingdom nationals as defined in point (2) of Article 2 of
Directive 2004/38/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council;
(ii) persons other than those defined in
Article 3(2) of Directive 2004/38/EC whose presence is required by Union
citizens or United Kingdom nationals in order not to deprive those Union
citizens or United Kingdom nationals of a right of residence granted by this
Part;
(b)
"frontier workers" means Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals
who pursue an economic activity in accordance with Article 45 or 49 TFEU in one
or more States in which they do not reside;
(c)
"host State" means:
(i) in respect of Union citizens and their
family members, the United Kingdom, if they exercised their right of residence
there in accordance with Union law before the end of the transition period and
continue to reside there thereafter;
(ii) in respect of United Kingdom nationals
and their family members, the Member State in which they exercised their right
of residence in accordance with Union law before the end of the transition
period and in which they continue to reside thereafter;
(d)
"State of work" means:
(i) in respect of Union citizens, the United
Kingdom, if they pursued an economic activity as frontier workers there before
the end of the transition period and continue to do so thereafter;
(ii) in respect of United Kingdom nationals, a
Member State in which they pursued an economic activity as frontier workers
before the end of the transition period and in which they continue to do so
thereafter;
(e)
"rights of custody" means rights of custody within the meaning of
point (9) of Article 2 of Council Regulation (EC) No 2201/2003, including
rights of custody acquired by judgment, by operation of law or by an agreement
having legal effect.
Comments: The reference to special rules in Title III
reflects a derogation from Article 9(a) since EU social security law has its
own definition of family members.
To
interpret Article 9(a) of the agreement, note that Article 2(2) of the
citizens’ Directive, referred to here, defines core family members as follows:
(a)
the spouse;
(b)
the partner with whom the Union citizen has contracted a registered
partnership, on the basis of the legislation of a Member State, if the
legislation of the host Member State treats registered partnerships as
equivalent to marriage and in accordance with the conditions laid down in the
relevant legislation of the host Member State;
(c)
the direct descendants who are under the age of 21 or are dependants and those
of the spouse or partner as defined in point (b);
(d)
the dependent direct relatives in the ascending line and those of the spouse or
partner as defined in point (b).
The
interpretation of the EU law definition of “family member” must follow CJEU
case law: see Articles 4 and 5. The relevant case law includes the Coman case
on whether same-sex spouses are covered by the definition of “spouse” (they
are: see discussion here),
and the case law on the definition of “dependence” (see discussion of the most
recent case law here).
Two
important issues arise from Article 9(a). First of all, the CJEU ruled
in Lounes (discussed here)
that dual citizens of two Member States can claim rights in one of those Member
States if they have moved between them.
Secondly,
in a line of case law starting in Zambrano (discussed here),
the EU ruled that where children live in the Member State of their nationality
but have a non-EU parent with caring obligations for the child, the non-EU
parent cannot be removed (except on public security etc grounds) as it would
infringe the child’s EU citizenship rights. It might be argued that this
category of persons is not covered by Article 9(a).
The
same is true of family members of EU27 or UK citizens who return to their state
of nationality (see the Surinder Singh and Eind case law, discussed here).
A fourth line of case law – on the children of workers and their carers – is
addressed by Article 23 of the Agreement).
The
definitions of “frontier worker” and “rights of custody” in Article 9(b) and
(e) are also EU law concepts, where the CJEU case law must be applied in
accordance with Articles 5 and 6. As for the latter rule, Article 2(9) of the
Brussels IIa Regulation states that “the term "rights of custody"
shall include rights and duties relating to the care of the person of a child,
and in particular the right to determine the child's place of residence.”
Note
that these definitions are only applicable to the citizens’ rights rules in
part Two; other definitions applicable to the entire agreement (including the
citizens’ rights Part) appear in Article 2.
Article 10
Personal scope
1.
Without prejudice to Title III, this Part shall apply to the following persons:
(a)
Union citizens who exercised their right to reside in the United Kingdom in
accordance with Union law before the end of the transition period and continue
to reside there thereafter;
(b)
United Kingdom nationals who exercised their right to reside in a Member State
in accordance with Union law before the end of the transition period and
continue to reside there thereafter;
(c)
Union citizens who exercised their right as frontier workers in the United
Kingdom in accordance with Union law before the end of the transition period
and continue to do so thereafter;
(d)
United Kingdom nationals who exercised their right as frontier workers in one
or more Member States in accordance with Union law before the end of the
transition period and continue to do so thereafter;
(e)
family members of the persons referred to in points (a) to (d), provided that
they fulfil one of the following conditions:
(i) they resided in the host State in
accordance with Union law before the end of the transition period and continue
to reside there thereafter;
(ii) they were directly related to a person
referred to in points (a) to (d) and resided outside the host State before the
end of the transition period, provided that they fulfil the conditions set out
in point (2) of Article 2 of Directive 2004/38/EC at the time they seek
residence under this Part in order to join the person referred to in points (a)
to (d) of this paragraph;
(iii) they were born to, or legally adopted
by, persons referred to in points (a) to (d) after the end of the transition
period, whether inside or outside the host State, and fulfil the conditions set
out in point (2)(c) of Article 2 of Directive 2004/38/EC at the time they seek
residence under this Part in order to join the person referred to in points (a)
to (d) of this paragraph and fulfil one of the following conditions:
– both parents are persons referred to in
points (a) to (d)
- one parent is a person referred to in points
(a) to (d) and the other is a national of the host State; or
– one
parent is a person referred to in points (a) to (d) and has sole or joint
rights of custody of the child, in accordance with the applicable rules of
family law of a Member State or of the United Kingdom, including applicable
rules of private international law under which rights of custody established
under the law of a third State are recognised in the Member State or in the
United Kingdom, in particular as regards the best interests of the child, and
without prejudice to the normal operation of such applicable rules of private
international law;
[Note:
“The notion of rights of custody is to be interpreted in accordance with point
(9) of Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 2201/2003. Therefore, it covers rights
of custody acquired by judgment, by operation of law or by an agreement having
legal effect.”]
(f)
family members who resided in the host State in accordance with Articles 12 and
13, Article 16(2) and Articles 17 and 18 of Directive 2004/38/EC before the end
of the transition period and continue to reside there thereafter.
2.
Persons falling under points (a) and (b) of Article 3(2) of Directive
2004/38/EC whose residence was facilitated by the host State in accordance with
its national legislation before the end of the transition period in accordance
with Article 3(2) of that Directive shall retain their right of residence in
the host State in accordance with this Part, provided that they continue to
reside in the host State thereafter.
3.
Paragraph 2 shall also apply to persons falling under points (a) and (b) of
Article 3(2) of Directive 2004/38/EC who have applied for facilitation of entry
and residence before the end of the transition period, and whose residence is
being facilitated by the host State in accordance with its national legislation
thereafter.
4.
Without prejudice to any right to residence which the persons concerned may
have in their own right, the host State shall, in accordance with its national
legislation and in accordance with point (b) of Article 3(2) of Directive
2004/38/EC, facilitate entry and residence for the partner with whom the person
referred to in points (a) to (d) of paragraph 1 of this Article has a durable
relationship, duly attested, where that partner resided outside the host State
before the end of the transition period, provided that the relationship was
durable before the end of the transition period and continues at the time the
partner seeks residence under this Part.
5.
In the cases referred to in paragraphs 3 and 4, the host State shall undertake
an extensive examination of the personal circumstances of the persons concerned
and shall justify any denial of entry or residence to such persons.
Comment: The reference to Title III as a lex specialis can
be explained by the different personal scope of social security law.
Article
10(1) reflects, like Article 9(c), a limitation on the scope of the agreement
by means of the words “and continue to reside there thereafter”. While the UK
government intends to protect family members of UK citizens covered by the
Surinder Singh case law in national law, that does not adequately protect their
rights, since it is possible that they will later be subject to the “hostile
environment” of UK immigration law.
As
for Article 10(1)(e), on core family members: point (i) covers those already
resident before the end of the transition period on the basis of EU law, which
as broadly defined by Article 2, covers also EU immigration and asylum law.
Point (ii) covers those who resided outside the host State before that date,
who can still seek entry on the basis of Article 2(2) of the Directive, as long
as they had a relationship before then. Point (iii) covers children born to or
adopted by EU27 or UK citizens or their family members after that date,
regardless of where they were born, as long as they are under 21 or dependent
as defined by EU law. This includes cases where one parent is an EU27/UK
citizen and the other is a UK national, and where one parent is covered by the
Agreement and has sole or joint rights of custody (which was defined in Article
9).
Note
also that Article 10(1)(f) protects family members who were present as
permanent residents or pursuant to the family breakdown rules in the EU
Directive before the end of transition period. Moreover, Article 23 covers a
group of children and carers who will in some cases fall outside the scope of
this Article.
Article
10(2) to (5) set out rules for extended family members, as defined by reference
to Article 3(2) of the citizens Directive. The persons concerned are: (a) “any
other family members, irrespective of their nationality, not falling under the
definition” in Article 2(2) who, “in the country from which they have come, are
dependants or members of the household of the Union citizen having the primary
right of residence, or where serious health grounds strictly require the
personal care of the family member by the Union citizen”; and (b) “the partner
with whom the Union citizen has a durable relationship, duly attested”.
It
is sometimes falsely suggested that the list of extended family members in EU
free movement law is unlimited, and that there is an obligation to admit them.
Neither claim is true, as the obligation to “facilitate entry and residence” is
not a right of admission as such, as confirmed by the CJEU in its judgment
in Rahman.
(See also Banger).
In
any event, the agreement will curtail the limited rights of extended family
members significantly. Article 10(2) only continues the “facilitation”
obligation if the family members concerned resided in the host State on that
basis before the end of the transition period and continue to reside there afterwards.
Article 10(3) extends this to pending applications. Article 10(4) allows
slightly more protection for duly attested partners, but the facilitation
obligation for them still applies only where “the relationship was durable
before the end of the transition period and continues at the time the partner
seeks residence under this Part.” If the couple concerned chooses to marry (if
that option is possible) then they would fall within the scope of Article 10(1).
Article 11
Continuity of residence
Continuity of residence for the purposes of Articles 9 and 10
shall not be affected by absences as referred to in Article 15(2). The right of
permanent residence acquired under Directive 2004/38/EC before the end of the
transition period shall not be treated as lost through absence from the host
State for a period specified in Article 15(3).
Comment: The first sentence says that the rules on
continuity of residence, which are applied to acquisition of permanent
residence as in Article 15 of the agreement, do not apply to any issues of
continuity of residence which may arise from Articles 9 or 10. The second
sentence means that permanent residents who held that status before the end of
the transition period cannot lose that status due to five years’ absence.
Article 12
Non-discrimination
Within
the scope of this Part, and without prejudice to any special provisions
contained therein, any discrimination on grounds of nationality within the
meaning of the first subparagraph of Article 18 TFEU shall be prohibited in the
host State and the State of work in respect of the persons referred to in
Article 10 of this Agreement.
Comment: This Article copies the wording of Article
18 TFEU, first subparagraph, and refers to it also, so the relevant CJEU
case law will apply. Note that other non-discrimination clauses appear in
Articles 22 and 23 of this agreement.
TITLE II
RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS
CHAPTER 1
Rights related to residence, residence documents
Article 13
Residence rights
1.
Union citizens and United Kingdom nationals shall have the right to reside in
the host State under the limitations and conditions as set out in Articles 21,
45 or 49 TFEU and in Article 6(1), points (a), (b) or (c) of Article 7(1),
Article 7(3), Article 14, Article 16(1) or Article 17(1) of Directive
2004/38/EC.
2.
Family members who are either Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals shall
have the right to reside in the host State as set out in Article 21 TFEU and in
Article 6(1), point (d) of Article 7(1), Article 12(1) or (3), Article 13(1),
Article 14, Article 16(1) or Article 17(3) and (4) of Directive 2004/38/EC,
subject to the limitations and conditions set out in those provisions.
3.
Family members who are neither Union citizens nor United Kingdom nationals
shall have the right to reside in the host State under Article 21 TFEU and as
set out in Article 6(2), Article 7(2), Article 12(2) or (3), Article 13(2),
Article 14, Article 16(2), Article 17(3) or (4) or Article 18 of Directive
2004/38/EC, subject to the limitations and conditions set out in those
provisions.
4.
The host State may not impose any limitations or conditions for obtaining,
retaining or losing residence rights on the persons referred to in paragraphs
1, 2 and 3, other than those provided for in this Title. There shall be no
discretion in applying the limitations and conditions provided for in this
Title, other than in favour of the person concerned.
Comments: This Article sets out the core right to
stay on the territory for EU27/UK citizens and their family members. It is not
absolute, since it is subject to the process of confirming status after Brexit
(Article 18) and removal in the event of criminality (Article 19); and the
persons concerned must meet the conditions for residence in the first place.
These conditions are generous, but not unlimited; in particular there is no
right to stay solely on the basis of receiving social benefits from the
outset.
More
precisely, Article 13(1) refers to the EU law rules on citizenship and free
movement (Article 21 TFEU), free movement of workers (Article 45 TFEU), free
movement of self-employed people (Article 49 TFEU), initial stays (Article
6(1), citizens’ Directive), stays after three months (Article 7(1)(a) to (c),
citizens’ Directive), stays as a former worker (Article 7(3)); stays looking
for work (Article 14, citizens’ Directive), and permanent residence (Article
16(1) or Article 17(1), citizens’ Directive). On former workers, note that the
EU law applies to those who take a break for maternity, even if they switch
employers at that time under certain conditions (see discussion here
and the recent case law on self-employed workers discussed here);
it also covers the self-employed (see the Pusa judgment),
but not those who become unemployed shortly after arriving and run out of time
to find replacement work (see discussion here).
While non-economic migrants need “sufficient resources” to stay, the case
law makes
clear that this can be provided by others, for instance a spouse or
partner.
Article
13(2) of the agreement sets out the corresponding rules for family members who
are EU or UK citizens, while Article 13(3) of the agreement sets out the
corresponding rules for family members who are not EU or UK citizens.
Note that Articles 12 and Article 13 of the citizens’ Directive, referred to
here, concern stays after family breakdown, while Article 18 of that Directive
grants permanent residence rights to those who stayed on the basis of those
provisions. (On the most recent CJEU judgment on the family breakdown rules,
see the discussion here).
All
these references to EU law are subject to the interpretation rules in Articles
4 and 5. Article 13(4) removes any state discretion over “obtaining,
maintaining or losing residence rights” besides the possibilities set out in
this Title.
Article 14
Right of exit and of entry
1.
Union citizens and United Kingdom nationals, their respective family members,
and other persons, who reside in the territory of the host State in accordance
with the conditions set out in this Title shall have the right to leave the
host State and the right to enter it, as set out in Article 4(1) and the first
subparagraph of Article 5(1) of Directive 2004/38/EC, with a valid passport or
national identity card in the case of Union citizens and United Kingdom
nationals, and with a valid passport in the case of their respective family members
and other persons who are not Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals.
Five
years after the end of the transition period, the host State may decide no
longer to accept national identity cards for the purposes of entry to or exit
from its territory if such cards do not include a chip that complies with the
applicable International Civil Aviation Organisation standards related to
biometric identification.
2.
No exit visa, entry visa or equivalent formality shall be required of holders
of a valid document issued in accordance with Article 18 or 26.
3.
Where the host State requires family members who join the Union citizen or
United Kingdom national after the end of the transition period to have an entry
visa, the host State shall grant such persons every facility to obtain the
necessary visas. Such visas shall be issued free of charge as soon as possible,
and on the basis of an accelerated procedure.
Comments: The first sentence of Article 14(1)
matches – and cross-refers to – Article 4(1) and the first sub-paragraph of
5(1) of the citizens’ Directive. However, the second sentence of Article 14(1)
is not the same as Article 4(2) or the second sub-paragraph of Article 5(1) of
that Directive, since it limits the exemption from an entry visa or similar
document only for those who hold a new residence document on the basis of
Article 18 (the “settled status” clause) or Article 25 (document for frontier
workers) of the agreement.
Article
14(2) can be compared to Article 5(2) of the Directive, which also provides for
exemption of the visa requirement if the person has a residence card, and
covers short-term visits (see the 2014 McCarthy judgment, discussed here).
There
is no equivalent to Article 4(3) and (4) of the Directive, concerning the issue
of passports or identity cards to nationals. Nor is there any equivalent to:
Article 5(3) of the Directive, banning entry or exit stamps in passports of
those non-EU family members holding a residence card; Article 5(4) of the
Directive, giving people the opportunity to obtain travel documents or visas;
or Article 5(5) of the Directive, an option to require reporting presence,
which can be made subject to proportionate and non-discriminatory
sanctions.
Right of permanent residence
1.
Union citizens and United Kingdom nationals, and their respective family
members, who have resided legally in the host State in accordance with Union
law for a continuous period of 5 years or for the period specified in Article
17 of Directive 2004/38/EC, shall have the right to reside permanently in the
host State under the conditions set out in Articles 16, 17 and 18 of Directive
2004/38/EC. Periods of legal residence or work in accordance with Union law
before and after the end of the transition period shall be included in the
calculation of the qualifying period necessary for acquisition of the right of
permanent residence.
2.
Continuity of residence for the purposes of acquisition of the right of
permanent residence shall be determined in accordance with Article 16(3) and
Article 21 of Directive 2004/38/EC.
3.
Once acquired, the right of permanent residence shall be lost only through
absence from the host State for a period exceeding 5 consecutive years.
Comment: Article 15(1) incorporates the main rule on
acquiring permanent residence in Article 16 of the citizens’ Directive, as well
as the subsidiary rules in Articles 17 and 18 of that law. The second sentence
confirms that times of employment both before and after the end of the
transition period will count.
An
important point here is that Article 15(1) refers to time present on the basis
of EU law, as defined broadly by Article 2(a), not only to time
spent on the basis of the Directive. This is broader than the case law of the
ECJ, which says that only time spent on the basis of the Directive counts (see
the Alarape and Tijani judgment).
(There are other forms of legal stay under EU law: see Article 23 of this
agreement, for instance. And “EU law” could also, for non-EU family members,
refer to residence on the basis of EU immigration or asylum law applicable to
non-EU citizens). However, Article 16 of this Agreement,
confusingly, refers only to time spent on the basis of the Directive,
reflecting the wording of the case law again.
Note
that Article 16(1) of the Directive goes on to say that: “This right shall not
be subject to the conditions provided for in Chapter III”, ie the rules on the
initial five-year stay. This is implicitIy incorporated into Article 15(1) of
the agreement by the cross-reference to Article 16 of the Directive. Indeed the
cross-reference to EU law incorporates all the relevant case law, except
arguably the Alarape and Tijani case due to the different wording.
The
cross-reference in Article 15(1) of the agreement also includes Article 16(2)
of the Directive, which grants permanent residence to non-EU family members who
“have legally resided with the Union citizen in the host Member State for a
continuous period of five years”; Article 17 of the Directive, which grants
permanent residence after a shorter period in the event of retirement, death or
accident at work; and Article 18 of the Directive, which gives permanent
residence to non-EU family members in the event of family breakdown referred to
in Articles 12 and 13 of the Directive (see Article 13 of this agreement).
Article
15(2) of the agreement, concerning continuity of residence, incorporates
Article 16(3) of the Directive, which provides:
Continuity
of residence shall not be affected by temporary absences not exceeding a total
of six months a year, or by absences of a longer duration for compulsory
military service, or by one absence of a maximum of twelve consecutive months
for important reasons such as pregnancy and childbirth, serious illness, study
or vocational training, or a posting in another Member State or a third
country.
It
also incorporates Article 21 of the Directive, which provides:
…continuity
of residence may be attested by any means of proof in use in the host Member
State. Continuity of residence is broken by any expulsion decision
duly enforced against the person concerned.
Article
15(3) of the agreement, on loss of the status, is identical to Article 16(4) of
the citizens’ Directive, except that the relevant period is five years, not two
as in the Directive. Nevertheless, the persons concerned still have lesser
protection overall, since under the Directive they could always exercise free
movement rights from scratch if they met the criteria in Article 7 of the
Directive. Post-Brexit they cannot.
Article 16
Accumulation of periods
Union citizens and United Kingdom nationals, and their
respective family members, who before the end of the transition period resided
legally in the host State in accordance with the conditions of Article 7 of
Directive 2004/38/EC for a period of less than 5 years, shall have the right to
acquire the right to reside permanently under the conditions set out in Article
15 of this Agreement once they have completed the necessary periods of
residence. Periods of legal residence or work in accordance with Union law
before and after the end of the transition period shall be included in the
calculation of the qualifying period necessary for acquisition of the right of
permanent residence.
Comment: It is hard to see how to distinguish this Article
from Article 15(1) of this agreement, which it differs from only by referring
explicitly to residence on the basis of the citizens’ Directive, rather than EU
law more generally. While Article 16 only covers those who do not yet qualify
for permanent residence at the end of the transition/implementation period,
Article 15(1) must cover them too, since it also refers to periods of residence
after that date.
Article 17
Status and changes
1. The right of Union citizens and United Kingdom nationals,
and their respective family members, to rely directly on this Part shall not be
affected when they change status, for example between student, worker,
self-employed person and economically inactive person. Persons who, at the end
of the transition period, enjoy a right of residence in their capacity as
family members of Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals, cannot become
persons referred to in points (a) to (d) of Article 10(1).
2. The rights provided for in this Title for the family
members who are dependants of Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals before
the end of the transition period, shall be maintained even after they cease to
be dependants.
Comment: The right of EU citizens or their family members
to change the basis of their stay (provided that they still comply with the
criteria for residence under EU law) is not explicitly referred to in the
citizens’ Directive, but has always been protected in practice under the CJEU
case law.
Article 18
Issuance of residence documents
1. The host State may require Union citizens or United
Kingdom nationals, their respective family members and other persons, who
reside in its territory in accordance with the conditions set out in this
Title, to apply for a new residence status which confers the rights under this
Title and a document evidencing such status which may be in a digital form.
Comment: This is the “settled status” clause. Note that it
is optional for the UK or EU27 Member State to apply it. Obviously the UK at
least is doing so. Note that holding the document as a condition
enjoying rights diverges from Article 25 of the citizens’ directive,
which states that holding forms cannot be a precondition for having any form of
status under the Directive. The pledges of “no less favourable status” and
“automatic indefinite leave to remain” for EU27 citizens in the UK have
therefore been breached.
Applying
for such a residence status shall be subject to the following conditions:
(a)
the purpose of the application procedure shall be to verify whether the
applicant is entitled to the residence rights set out in this Title. Where that
is the case, the applicant shall have a right to be granted the residence
status and the document evidencing that status;
Comment: There is no overall discretion to refuse the
document if the applicant can prove their entitlement to status, as Article 13(4)
states.
(b) the deadline for submitting the application shall not be
less than 6 months from the end of the transition period, for persons residing
in the host State before the end of the transition period.
For persons who have the right to commence residence after
the end of the transition period in the host State in accordance with this
Title, the deadline for submitting the application shall be 3 months after
their arrival or the expiry of the deadline referred to in the first
subparagraph, whichever is later.
A certificate of application for the residence status shall
be issued immediately;
Comment: This resembles Article 8(2) of the citizens’
Directive, which has a three-month minimum deadline. It goes on to state that
the certificate of application must state “the name and address of the person
registering and the date of the registration” and that “[f]ailure to comply
with the registration requirement may render the person concerned liable to
proportionate and non-discriminatory sanctions”. Note that if the transition
period is extended, this deadline is extended too. At a minimum the deadline is
June 30 2021.
(c) the deadline for submitting the application referred to
in point (b) shall be extended automatically by 1 year where the Union has
notified the United Kingdom, or the United Kingdom has notified the Union, that
technical problems prevent the host State either from registering the
application or from issuing the certificate of application referred to in point
(b). The host State shall publish that notification and shall provide
appropriate public information for the persons concerned in good time;
Comment: This is new compared to the citizens’ Directive.
A one-year extension may prove to be useful in practice.
(d) where the deadline for submitting the application
referred to in point (b) is not respected by the persons concerned, the
competent authorities shall assess all the circumstances and reasons for not
respecting the deadline and shall allow those persons to submit an application
within a reasonable further period of time if there are reasonable grounds for
the failure to respect the deadline;
Comment: The “try again” clause is new compared to the
citizens’ Directive. It could be useful in practice but is not clearly drafted
as a right of the person concerned. Presumably point (r) grants a right of
redress in the event of refusal here.
(e) the host State shall ensure that any administrative procedures
for applications are smooth, transparent and simple, and that any unnecessary
administrative burdens are avoided;
(f) application forms shall be short, simple, user friendly
and adapted to the context of this Agreement; applications made by families at
the same time shall be considered together;
(g) the document evidencing the status shall be issued free
of charge or for a charge not exceeding that imposed on citizens or nationals
of the host State for the issuing of similar documents;
Comment: The cost clause resembles Article 25(2) of the
citizens’ Directive. Note the exemption in (h) however. The UK has chosen to
waive fees.
(h) persons who, before the end of the transition period,
hold a valid permanent residence document issued under Article 19 or 20 of
Directive 2004/38/EC or hold a valid domestic immigration document conferring a
permanent right to reside in the host State, shall have the right to exchange
that document within the period referred to in point (b) of this paragraph for
a new residence document upon application after a verification of their
identity, a criminality and security check in accordance with point (p) of this
paragraph and confirmation of their ongoing residence; such new residence
documents shall be issued free of charge;
Comment: Those who already hold documentation of permanent
residence have an option to apply again. There is an exemption from costs and
there are limited grounds to refuse.
(i) the identity of the applicants shall be verified through
the presentation of a valid passport or national identity card for Union
citizens and United Kingdom nationals, and through the presentation of a valid
passport for their respective family members and other persons who are not
Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals; the acceptance of such identity
documents shall not be made conditional upon any criteria other than that of
the validity of the document. Where the identity document is retained by the
competent authorities of the host State while the application is pending, the
host State shall return that document upon application without delay, before
the decision on the application has been taken;
Comment: this partly reflects the wording of Article 8(3)
of the citizens Directive. Note the requirement to return passports or identity
cards.
(j)
supporting documents other than identity documents, such as civil status
documents, may be submitted in copy. Originals of supporting documents may be
required only in specific cases where there is a reasonable doubt as to the
authenticity of the supporting documents submitted;
(k) the host State may only require Union citizens and United
Kingdom nationals to present, in addition to the identity documents referred to
in point (i) of this paragraph, the following supporting documents as referred
to in Article 8(3) of Directive 2004/38/EC:
(i) where they reside in the host
State in accordance with point (a) of Article 7(1) of Directive 2004/38/EC as
workers or self-employed, a confirmation of engagement from the employer or a certificate
of employment, or proof that they are self-employed;
(ii) where they reside in the host
State in accordance with point (b) of Article 7(1) of Directive 2004/38/EC as
economically inactive persons, evidence that they have sufficient resources for
themselves and their family members not to become a burden on the social
assistance system of the host State during their period of residence and that
they have comprehensive sickness insurance cover in the host State; or
(iii) where they reside in the host
State in accordance with point (c) of Article 7(1) of Directive 2004/38/EC as
students, proof of enrolment at an establishment accredited or financed by the
host State on the basis of its legislation or administrative practice, proof of
comprehensive sickness insurance cover, and a declaration or equivalent means
of proof, that they have sufficient resources for themselves and their family
members not to become a burden on the social assistance system of the host
State during their period of residence. The host State may not require such
declarations to refer to any specific amount of resources.
With regard to the condition of sufficient resources, Article
8(4) of Directive 2004/38/EC shall apply;
Comment: This copies – and cross-refers to – the criteria
and process in the citizens’ Directive. The underlying problem here is the UK’s
insistence that NHS cover does not count as “comprehensive sickness insurance”.
While the UK has promised to waive this requirement, this is in principle not
an enforceable right and there is a risk that the Agreement could be
interpreted as meaning that the persons concerned are not covered by it at
all.
(l)
the host State may only require family members who fall under point (e)(i) of
Article 10(1) or Article 10(2) or (3) of this Agreement and who reside in the
host State in accordance with point (d) of Article 7(1) or Article 7(2) of
Directive 2004/38/EC to present, in addition to the identity documents referred
to in point (i) of this paragraph, the following supporting documents as
referred to in Article 8(5) or 10(2) of Directive 2004/38/EC:
(i) a document attesting to the existence of a
family relationship or registered partnership;
(ii) the registration certificate or, in the
absence of a registration system, any other proof that the Union citizen or the
United Kingdom national with whom they reside actually resides in the host
State;
(iii) for direct descendants who are under the
age of 21 or who are dependants and dependent direct relatives in the ascending
line, and for those of the spouse or registered partner, documentary evidence
that the conditions set out in point (c) or (d) of Article 2(2) of Directive
2004/38/EC are fulfilled;
(iv) for the persons referred to in Article
10(2) or (3) of this Agreement, a document issued by the relevant authority in
the host State in accordance with Article 3(2) of Directive 2004/38/EC.
With
regard to the condition of sufficient resources as concerns family members who
are themselves Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals, Article 8(4) of
Directive 2004/38/EC shall apply;
Comment: This copies – and cross-refers to – the criteria
and process in the citizens’ Directive.
(m)
the host State may only require family members who fall under point (e)(ii) of
Article 10(1) or Article 10(4) of this Agreement to present, in addition to the
identity documents referred to in point (i) of this paragraph, the following
supporting documents as referred to in Articles 8(5) and 10(2) of Directive
2004/38/EC:
(i) a document attesting to the existence of a
family relationship or of a registered partnership;
(ii) the registration certificate or, in the
absence of a registration system, any other proof of residence in the host
State of the Union citizen or of the United Kingdom nationals whom they are
joining in the host State;
(iii) for spouses or registered partners, a
document attesting to the existence of a family relationship or a registered
partnership before the end of the transition period;
(iv) for direct descendants who are under the
age of 21 or who are dependants and dependent direct relatives in the ascending
line and those of the spouse or registered partner, documentary evidence that
they were related to Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals before the end
of the transition period and fulfil the conditions set out in point (c) or (d)
of Article 2(2) of Directive 2004/38/EC relating to age or dependence;
(v) for the persons referred to in Article
10(4) of this Agreement, proof that a durable relationship with Union citizens
or United Kingdom nationals existed before the end of the transition period and
continues to exist thereafter;
Comment: This copies – and cross-refers to – the criteria
and process in the citizens’ Directive.
(n)
for cases other than those set out in points (k), (l) and (m), the host State
shall not require applicants to present supporting documents that go beyond
what is strictly necessary and proportionate to provide evidence that the
conditions relating to the right of residence under this Title have been
fulfilled;
Comment: This presumably refers to those covered by
Article 23 – children of workers and their carers.
(o)
the competent authorities of the host State shall help the applicants to prove
their eligibility and to avoid any errors or omissions in their applications;
they shall give the applicants the opportunity to furnish supplementary
evidence and to correct any deficiencies, errors or omissions;
Comment: This would be a useful procedural protection in
practice.
(p)
criminality and security checks may be carried out systematically on
applicants, with the exclusive aim of verifying whether the restrictions set
out in Article 20 of this Agreement may be applicable. For that purpose,
applicants may be required to declare past criminal convictions which appear in
their criminal record in accordance with the law of the State of conviction at
the time of the application. The host State may, if it considers this
essential, apply the procedure set out in Article 27(3) of Directive 2004/38/EC
with respect to enquiries to other States regarding previous criminal
records;
Comment: Note that Article 27(3) of the citizens’
Directive states that such checks will not be made “as a matter of routine”.
(q)
the new residence document shall include a statement that it has been issued in
accordance with this Agreement;
(r)
the applicant shall have access to judicial and, where appropriate,
administrative redress procedures in the host State against any decision
refusing to grant the residence status. The redress procedures shall allow for
an examination of the legality of the decision, as well as of the facts and
circumstances on which the proposed decision is based. Such redress procedures
shall ensure that the decision is not disproportionate.
Comment: the second sentence reflects Article 31(3) of the
citizens’ Directive, although there is no cross-reference to it, and the
reference to the high threshold for expulsion in Article 28 of that Directive
has been dropped.
2.
During the period referred to in point (b) of paragraph 1 of this Article and
its possible one year extension under point (c) of that paragraph, all rights
provided for in this Part shall be deemed to apply to Union citizens or United
Kingdom nationals, their respective family members, and other persons residing
in the host State, in accordance with the conditions and subject to the
restrictions set out in Article 20.
Comment: A useful ban on the Home Office, or any EU27
countries, “jumping the gun”.
3.
Pending a final decision by the competent authorities on any application
referred to in paragraph 1, and pending a final judgment handed down in case of
judicial redress sought against any rejection of such application by the
competent administrative authorities, all rights provided for in this Part
shall be deemed to apply to the applicant, including Article 21 on safeguards
and right of appeal, subject to the conditions set out in Article 20(4).
4. Where a host State has chosen not
to require Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals, their family members,
and other persons, residing in its territory in accordance with the conditions
set out in this Title, to apply for the new residence status referred to in
paragraph 1 as a condition for legal residence, those eligible for residence
rights under this Title shall have the right to receive, in accordance with the
conditions set out in Directive 2004/38/EC, a residence document, which may be
in a digital form, that includes a statement that it has been issued in
accordance with this Agreement.
ARTICLE 19
Issuance of residence documents
during the transition period
1. During the transition period, a host State may allow
applications for a residence status or residence document as referred to in
Article 18(1) and (4) to be made voluntarily from the date of entry into force
of this Agreement.
2. Decisions to accept or refuse such applications shall be
taken in accordance with Article 18(1) and (4). Decisions under Article 18(1)
shall have no effect until after the end of the transition period.
3. If an application under Article 18(1) is accepted before
the end of the transition period, the host State may not withdraw the decision
granting the residence status before the end of the transition period on any
grounds other than those set out in Chapter VI and Article 35 of Directive
2004/38/EC.
4. If an application is refused before the end of the
transition period, the applicant may apply again at any time before the expiry
of the period set out in point (b) of Article 18(1).
5. Without prejudice to paragraph 4, the redress procedures
under point (r) of Article 18(1) shall be available from the date of any
decision to refuse an application referred to in paragraph 2 of this Article.
Comment: this
Article provides that applications for “settled status” can be made from the
entry into force of the withdrawal agreement. In fact, the UK version of this
scheme has already started. But it confirms that refusals can only be made in
accordance with the EU citizens’ Directive. Article 185 states that this provision applies from entry into force of the withdrawal agreement.
Article 20
Restrictions of the rights of residence and entry
1.
The conduct of Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals, their family
members, and other persons, who exercise rights under this Title, where that
conduct occurred before the end of the transition period, shall be considered
in accordance with Chapter VI of Directive 2004/38/EC.
2.
The conduct of Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals, their family
members, and other persons, who exercise rights under this Title, where that
conduct occurred after the end of the transition period, may constitute grounds
for restricting the right of residence by the host State or the right of entry
in the State of work in accordance with national legislation.
3.
The host State or the State of work may adopt the necessary measures to refuse,
terminate or withdraw any right conferred by this Title in the case of the
abuse of those rights or fraud, as set out in Article 35 of Directive
2004/38/EC. Such measures shall be subject to the procedural safeguards
provided for in Article 21 of this Agreement.
4.
The host State or the State of work may remove applicants who submitted
fraudulent or abusive applications from its territory under the conditions set
out in Directive 2004/38/EC, in particular Articles 31 and 35 thereof, even before
a final judgment has been handed down in the case of judicial redress sought
against any rejection of such an application.
Comment: Due to the cross-reference, the case law on these
provisions of the citizens’ Directive will apply. Chapter VI of that law
contains substantive rules limiting expulsion on grounds of public policy,
public security and public health, particularly in Articles 27-29; there is
substantial case law on these rules and on the predecessor law. It will be
necessary to establish when conduct took place before the end of the transition
period (Article 20(1)) and when it took place afterward, so national law
applies (Article 20(2)).
As
for Article 20(3), the case law on Article 35 of the Directive interprets that
rule narrowly (see Metock and
the 2014 McCarthy judgment, discussed here).
The reference to procedural protection in such cases is then undermined by
Article 20(4), which refers to expulsion before a final judgment, referring to
Article 31 of the Directive. But Article 31 only allows removal from the
territory, if the person concerned has applied for an interim order, in a
limited number of cases: an expulsion decision based on a prior judicial
decision; if there was prior access to judicial review; or where the expulsion
is based on “imperative grounds of public security” as defined in the Directive.
None of these cases correspond to Article 35 of the Directive. Possibly this
means that a person who is being excluded on the basis of Article 35 can have
fewer procedural rights only where that person also falls
within the scope of the exclusions in Article 31.
Article 21
Safeguards and right of appeal
The
safeguards set out in Article 15 and Chapter VI of Directive 2004/38/EC shall
apply in respect of any decision by the host State that restricts residence
rights of the persons referred to in Article 10 of this Agreement.
Comment: Due to the cross-reference, the case law on these
provisions of the citizens’ Directive will apply. Chapter VI of that law
contains rules on notification of decisions (Article 30), stay on the territory
(Article 31), entry bans (Article 32) and reconsideration of decisions (Article
33).
Article
15(1) of that Directive extends Articles 30 and 31 also to cases where
restrictions on free movement are applied not on grounds of public policy,
public security or public health, ie cases where the person might face
expulsion due to being reliant upon benefits. Article 15(3) rules out applying
an entry ban in such cases, and Article 15(2) states that “[e]xpiry of the
identity card or passport on the basis of which the person concerned entered
the host Member State and was issued with a registration certificate or
residence card shall not constitute a ground for expulsion from the host Member
State”.
Article 22
Related rights
In accordance with Article 23 of Directive
2004/38/EC, irrespective of nationality, the family members of a Union citizen
or United Kingdom national who have the right of residence or the right of
permanent residence in the host State or the State of work shall be entitled to
take up employment or self-employment there.
Comment: This clause essentially copies Article 23 of the
citizens’ Directive. Due to the cross-reference, the case law on that Article
will apply. This will be an important provision in practice for families where
a non-EU citizen spouse or partner earns the sole or higher income.
Article 23
Equal treatment
1.
In accordance with Article 24 of Directive 2004/38/EC, subject to the specific
provisions provided for in this Title and Titles I and IV of this Part, all
Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals residing on the basis of this
Agreement in the territory of the host State shall enjoy equal treatment with
the nationals of that State within the scope of this Part. The benefit of this
right shall be extended to those family members of Union citizens or United
Kingdom nationals who have the right of residence or permanent residence.
2.
By way of derogation from paragraph 1, the host State shall not be obliged to
confer entitlement to social assistance during periods of residence on the
basis of Article 6 or point (b) of Article 14(4) of Directive 2004/38/EC, nor
shall it be obliged, prior to a person's acquisition of the right of permanent
residence in accordance with Article 15 of this Agreement, to grant maintenance
aid for studies, including vocational training, consisting in student grants or
student loans to persons other than workers, self-employed persons, persons who
retain such status or to members of their families.
Comment: The reference to EU law means that the case law
on Articles 6, 14(4)(b) and 24 of the citizens’ Directive will apply (see
discussion of that case law here).
Para 1 is very similar to Article 24(1) of the Directive, which is referred to
directly anyway, except that it refers to the “specific provisions of” and
“scope of” this Title of Part Two of the agreement, rather than of the TFEU. There
are specific rules on equal treatment of workers, which are set out in Article
24 of the agreement.
The
limits on access to benefits in para 2 are substantively identical to those in
Article 24(2) of the citizens Directive: no social assistance during the first
three months of residence or for an initial job-seeker, and no student benefits
for non-economic migrants until they attain permanent residence.
CHAPTER 2
Rights of workers and self-employed persons
Article 24
Rights of workers
1.
Subject to the limitations set out in Article 45(3) and (4) TFEU, workers in
the host State and frontier workers in the State or States of work shall enjoy
the rights guaranteed by Article 45 TFEU and the rights granted by Regulation
(EU) No 492/2011 of the European Parliament and of the Council.
These
rights include:
(a)
the right not to be discriminated against on grounds of nationality as regards
employment, remuneration and other conditions of work and employment;
(b)
the right to take up and pursue an activity in accordance with the rules
applicable to the nationals of the host State or the State of work;
(c)
the right to assistance afforded by the employment offices of the host State or
the State of work as offered to own nationals;
(d)
the right to equal treatment in respect of conditions of employment and work,
in particular as regards remuneration, dismissal and in case of unemployment,
reinstatement or reemployment;
(e)
the right to social and tax advantages;
(f)
collective rights;
(g)
the rights and benefits accorded to national workers in matters of housing;
(h)
the right for their children to be admitted to the general educational,
apprenticeship and vocational training courses under the same conditions as the
nationals of the host State or the State of work, if such children are residing
in the territory where the worker works.
2.
Where a direct descendant of a worker who has ceased to reside in the host
State is in education in that State, the primary carer for that descendant
shall have the right to reside in that State until the descendant reaches the
age of majority, and after the age of majority if that descendant continues to
need the presence and care of the primary carer in order to pursue and complete
his or her education.
3.
Employed frontier workers shall enjoy the right to enter and exit the State of
work in accordance with Article 14 of this Agreement and shall retain the
rights they enjoyed as workers there, provided they are in one of the
circumstances set out in points (a), (b), (c) and (d) of Article 7(3) of
Directive 2004/38/EC, even where they do not move their residence to the State
of work.
Comments: Article 24 is a précis of the specific
rights of free movement of workers in EU free movement law, as set out in Article
45 TFEU and Regulation
492/2011, which replaced the previous Regulation 1612/68. Article 4 of the
agreement therefore requires relevant CJEU case law to apply, or for the UK
courts to have due regard to it. Note that the CJEU case law has confirmed that
the concept of “worker” has a wide scope, applying for instance to part-time
workers and trainees, as long as they are doing “genuine and effective” work.
On
Article 24(1)(a): Article 45(3) TFEU limits free movement of workers on grounds
of public policy, public security and public health, although the case law on
the relevant parts of the citizens’ Directive (and its predecessor legislation)
referred to in Article 21 of this agreement, and the case law interpreting it,
are also relevant. Article 45(4) TFEU limits free movement of workers by
providing that “The provisions of this article shall not apply to employment in
the public service”. CJEU case law interprets this exception narrowly.
Article
24(1)(a)(i) simply restates Article 45(2) TFEU, which has been the subject of
CJEU case law. The reference to Article 45(3) TFEU in Article 24(1)(a)(ii)
entails a reference to: “accept offers of employment actually made”; “move
freely within the territory of Member States for this purpose”; “stay in a
Member State for the purpose of employment in accordance with the provisions
governing the employment of nationals of that State laid down by law,
regulation or administrative action”; and “to remain in the territory of a
Member State after having been employed in that State”. The rules on the last
of those issues now appear in Article 17 of the citizens’ Directive, and are
incorporated in other provisions of this agreement.
Article
24(1)(b) effectively refers in turn to Regulation 492/2011: Article 1(1)
(Article 24(1)(b)(i)); Article 5 (Article 24(1)(b)(ii)); Article 7(1) (Article
24(1)(b)(iii)); Article 7(2) (Article 24(1)(b)(iv)); Article 8 (Article 24(1)(b)(v));
Article 9 (Article 24(1)(b)(vi)); and Article 10 (Article 24(1)(b)(vii)). But this
is a non-exhaustive list (“the rights set out in Regulation 492/2011,
including…”), so the rest of the Regulation is covered too.
Article
24(2) reflects the case law on Article 10 of Regulation 492/2011 and its
predecessor, Article 12 of Regulation 1612/68, which gave residence rights to
children in education and their carers as a corollary of access to education.
The residence right of the child of a worker (or former
worker) is protected by Article 24(1)(b)(vii), since it must be interpreted in
accordance with prior CJEU case law (according to Article 4(4) of the
agreement). See most recently the Alarape and Tijani case, discussed above as
regards Article 15.
Article
24(3) does not reflect any specific provision of the citizens’ Directive or
Regulation 492/2011.
Article 25
Rights of self-employed persons
1.
Subject to the limitations set out in Articles 51 and 52 TFEU, self-employed
persons in the host State and self-employed frontier workers in the State or
States of work shall enjoy the rights guaranteed by Articles 49 and 55 TFEU.
These
rights include:
(a)
the right to take up and pursue activities as self-employed persons and to set
up and manage undertakings under the conditions laid down by the host State for
its own nationals, as set out in Article 49 TFEU;
(b)
the rights as set out in points (c) to (h) of Article 24(1) of this Agreement.
2.
Article 24(2) shall apply to direct descendants of self-employed workers.
3.
Article 24(3) shall apply to self-employed frontier workers.
Comment: The wording of para 1(a) reflects the text
of Article
49 TFEU, on the rights of self-employed persons. The extension of the
provision on workers’ equality in Article 24 to self-employed persons (see para
1(b)) is significant, since Regulation 492/2011 does not apply as such to
self-employed workers; rather their equal treatment rights are based on the
Treaties. Para 2 does not reflect any specific legislative rule, but it should
be noted that it reaffirms the limit on UK citizens exercising free movement
rights in other Member States.
Article 26
Issuance of a document identifying frontier
workers' rights
The
State of work may require Union citizens and United Kingdom nationals who have
rights as frontier workers under this Title to apply for a document certifying
that they have such rights under this Title. Such Union citizens and United
Kingdom nationals shall have the right to be issued with such a document.
Comment: This does not reflect any specific provision of
the citizens’ Directive or Regulation 492/2011.
CHAPTER 3
Professional qualifications
Article 27
Recognised professional qualifications
1.
The recognition, before the end of the transition period, of professional
qualifications, as defined in point (b) of Article 3(1) of Directive 2005/36/EC
of the European Parliament and of the Council, of Union citizens or United
Kingdom nationals, and their family members, by their host State or their State
of work shall maintain its effects in the respective State, including the right
to pursue their profession under the same conditions as its nationals, where
such recognition was made in accordance with any of the following provisions:
(a)
Title III of Directive 2005/36/EC in respect of the recognition of professional
qualifications in the context of the exercise of the freedom of establishment,
whether such recognition fell under the general system for the recognition of
evidence of training, the system for the recognition of professional experience
or the system for the recognition on the basis of coordination of minimum
training conditions;
(b)
Article 10(1) and (3) of Directive 98/5/EC of the European Parliament and of
the Council in respect of gaining admission to the profession of lawyer in the
host State or State of work;
(c)
Article 14 of Directive 2006/43/EC of the European Parliament and of the
Council in respect of the approval of statutory auditors from another Member
State;
(d)
Council Directive 74/556/EEC in respect of the acceptance of evidence of the
knowledge and ability necessary to take up or pursue the activities of
self-employed persons and of intermediaries engaging in the trade and
distribution of toxic products or activities involving the professional use of
toxic products.
2.
Recognitions of professional qualifications for the purposes of point (a) of
paragraph 1 of this Article shall include:
(a)
recognitions of professional qualifications which have benefited from Article
3(3) of Directive 2005/36/EC;
(b)
decisions granting partial access to a professional activity in accordance with
Article 4f of Directive 2005/36/EC;
(c)
recognitions of professional qualifications for establishment purposes made
under Article 4d of Directive 2005/36/EC.
Comments: This Article ‘grandfathers’ recognition
of professional qualifications awarded before the end of the transition period,
but does not cover recognition of UK qualifications for EU27 citizens who move
after the end of that period to the Member State of nationality, or another
Member State. Equally it would not cover recognition in the UK of an EU27
qualification after Brexit day, even if the qualification was obtained
beforehand. As such this wording acts as a kind of retroactive obstacle to the
prior exercise of free movement. See comments on Articles 9 and 10 above, with
suggested amendments there. The references to EU legislation mean
that Articles 4 and 5 of the withdrawal agreement apply to interpretation.
It
should be noted, however, that the EU draft
guidelines on the future relationship refer to possible
negotiation on recognition of qualifications, which would cover the gaps just
identified – if such negotiations are comprehensive and successful.
Article 28
Ongoing procedures on the recognition of
professional qualifications
Article
4, Article 4d in respect of recognitions of professional qualifications for
establishment purposes, Article 4f and Title III of Directive 2005/36/EC,
Article 10(1), (3) and (4) of Directive 98/5/EC, Article 14 of Directive
2006/43/EC and Directive 74/556/EEC shall apply in respect of the examination
by a competent authority of the host State or State of work of any application for
the recognition of professional qualifications introduced before the end of the
transition period by Union citizens or United Kingdom nationals and in respect
of the decision on any such application.
Articles
4a, 4b and 4e of Directive 2005/36/EC shall also apply to the extent relevant
for the completion of the procedures for the recognitions of professional
qualifications for establishment purposes under Article 4d of that
Directive.
Comments: This clause ‘grandfathers’ recognition of
professional qualifications which were not awarded before the end of the
transition/implementation period, but where an application was made for
recognition before that date. Like Article 25, this Article does not cover
subsequent recognition in another State of a prior
qualification applied for before the end of that period, although this issue
might be addressed by a “future relationship” treaty.
Article 29
Administrative cooperation on recognition of
professional qualifications
1.
With regard to the pending applications referred to in Article 28, the United
Kingdom and the Member States shall cooperate in order to facilitate the
application of Article 28. Cooperation may include the exchange of information,
including information on disciplinary action or criminal sanctions taken or any
other serious and specific circumstances which are likely to have consequences
for the pursuit of the activities falling under the Directives referred to in
Article 28.
2.
By way of derogation from Article 8, for a period not exceeding 9 months from
the end of the transition period, the United Kingdom shall be entitled to use
the internal market information system in respect of applications referred to
in Article 28 in so far as they concern procedures for the recognition of
professional qualifications for establishment purposes under Article 4d of
Directive 2005/36/EC.
Comments: This Article could address concern sometimes
expressed in the UK about occasional cases in which EU27 professionals have
faced some sort of prior professional sanction and so should arguably not have
their professional qualification recognised. Note that the clause only applies
to qualification applications pending at the end of the transition period
(Article 28), not those qualifications recognised beforehand (Article 29). It
resembles part of Article 56 of Directive 2005/36, but without any
cross-reference to that provision (hence Articles 4 and 5 of this Agreement do
not apply) or some of the extra detail in that Article.
Title III
Coordination of social security systems
Article 30
Persons covered
1.
This Title shall apply to the following persons:
(a)
Union citizens who are subject to the legislation of the United Kingdom at the
end of the transition period, as well as their family members and survivors;
(b)
United Kingdom nationals who are subject to the legislation of a Member State
at the end of the transition period, as well as their family members and
survivors;
(c)
Union citizens who reside in the United Kingdom and are subject to the legislation
of a Member State at the end of the transition period, as well as their family
members and survivors;
(d)
United Kingdom nationals who reside in a Member State, and are subject to the
legislation of the United Kingdom at the end of the transition period, as well
as their family members and survivors;
(e)
persons who do not fall within points (a) to (d) but are:
(i) Union citizens who pursue an activity as
an employed or self-employed person in the United Kingdom at the end of the
transition period, and who, based on Title II of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 of
the European Parliament and of the Council, are subject to the legislation of a
Member State, as well as their family members and survivors; or
(ii) United Kingdom nationals who pursue an
activity as an employed or self-employed person in one or more Member States at
the end of the transition period, and who, based on Title II of Regulation (EC)
No 883/2004, are subject to the legislation of the United Kingdom, as well as
their family members and survivors;
(f)
stateless persons and refugees, residing in a Member State or in the United
Kingdom, who are in one of the situations described in points (a) to (e), as
well as their family members and survivors;
(g)
nationals of third countries, as well as members of their families and
survivors, who are in one of the situations described in points (a) to (e),
provided that they fulfil the conditions of Council Regulation (EC) No
859/2003.
2.
The persons referred to in paragraph 1 shall be covered for as long as they
continue without interruption to be in one of the situations set out in that
paragraph involving both a Member State and the United Kingdom at the same
time.
3.
This Title shall also apply to persons who do not, or who no longer, fall
within points (a) to (e) of paragraph 1 of this Article but who fall within
Article 10 of this Agreement, as well as their family members and survivors.
4.
The persons referred to in paragraph 3 shall be covered for as long as they
continue to have a right to reside in the host State under Article 13 of this
Agreement, or a right to work in their State of work under Article 24 or 25 of
this Agreement.
5.
Where this Article refers to family members and survivors, those persons shall
be covered by this Title only to the extent that they derive rights and
obligations in that capacity under Regulation (EC) No 883/2004.
Comments: Regulation 883/2004 is the main EU law
text on social security coordination for those who exercise free movement
rights. It’s the latest version of legislation going back to 1958, when the EEC
was first founded. Note that para 1(a) and (b) do not require that the person
concerned still remains in the relevant EU27 Member State or the UK; this is an
implied derogation from Article 10 of the Agreement. Regulation 987/2009 sets
out detailed rules to implement Regulation 883/2004.
The
inclusion of stateless persons and refugees in para 1(f) follows Regulation
883/2004 (and prior EU legislation on this issue), although note that the CJEU
ruled in Khalil and Addou that
like EU citizens, they only derive rights from the rules if they have moved
between Member States.
Para
1(g) refers to separate legislation extending the EU coordination rules to
other non-EU citizens who moved within the EU. The UK opted into the
legislation referred to. There are EU treaties with non-EU countries setting
out rules on social security coordination or equal treatment; they will apply
as regards the UK during the transition/implementation period subject to the
special rules in the Agreement on that period. After that point their continued
application will depend upon whether the UK has “rolled over” the relevant
treaty with the country concerned.
The
cross-references to EU law in Paras 1(e), 1(g) and (5) mean that Articles 4 and
5 apply to the interpretation of these rules.
Article 31
Social security coordination rules
1.
The rules and objectives set out in Article 48 TFEU, Regulation (EC) No
883/2004 and Regulation (EC) No 987/2009 of the European Parliament and of the
Council, shall apply to the persons covered by this Title. The Union and the
United Kingdom shall take due account of the Decisions and Recommendations of
the Administrative Commission for the Coordination of Social Security Systems
attached to the European Commission, set up under Regulation (EC) No 883/2004
("Administrative Commission") listed in Part I of Annex I to this
Agreement.
2.
By way of derogation from Article 9 of this Agreement, for the purposes of this
Title, the definitions in Article 1 of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 shall apply.
3.
With regard to nationals of third countries who fulfil the conditions of
Regulation (EC) No 859/2003, as well as their family members or survivors
within the scope of this Title, the references to Regulation (EC) No 883/2004
and Regulation (EC) No 987/2009 in this Title shall be understood as references
to Council Regulation (EEC) No 1408/71 and Council Regulation (EEC) No 574/72
respectively. References to specific provisions of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004
and Regulation (EC) No 987/2009 shall be understood as references to the
corresponding provisions of Regulation (EEC) No 1408/71 and Regulation (EEC) No
574/72.
Comments: An
earlier draft of these provisions was discussed in detail by Professor
Tammy Hervey.The cross-references to EU law in every para mean that
Articles 4 and 5 of the agreement apply to the interpretation of these rules.
Article 32
Special situations covered
1.
The following rules shall apply in the following situations to the extent set
out in this Article, insofar as they relate to persons not or no longer covered
by Article 30:
(a)
the following persons shall be covered by this Title for the purposes of
reliance on and aggregation of periods of insurance, employment,
self-employment or residence, including rights and obligations deriving from
such periods in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 883/2004:
(i) Union citizens, as well as stateless
persons and refugees residing in a Member State and nationals of third
countries who fulfil the conditions of Regulation (EC) No 859/2003, who have
been subject to the legislation of the United Kingdom before the end of the
transition period, as well as their family members and survivors;
(ii) United Kingdom nationals, as well as
stateless persons and refugees residing in the United Kingdom and nationals of
third countries who fulfil the conditions of Regulation (EC) No 859/2003, who
have been subject to the legislation of a Member State before the end of the
transition period, as well as their family members and survivors;
for
the purposes of the aggregation of periods, periods completed both before and
after the end of the transition period shall be taken into account in
accordance with Regulation (EC) No 883/2004;
(b)
the rules set out in Articles 20 and 27 of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 shall
continue to apply to persons who, before the end of the transition period, had
requested authorisation to receive a course of planned health care treatment
pursuant to Regulation (EC) No 883/2004, until the end of the treatment. The
corresponding reimbursement procedures shall also apply even after the
treatment ends. Such persons and the accompanying persons shall enjoy the right
to enter and exit the State of treatment in accordance with Article 14, mutatis
mutandis;
(c)
the rules set out in Articles 19 and 27 of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 shall
continue to apply to persons who are covered by Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 and
who are on a stay at the end of the transition period in a Member State or the
United Kingdom, until the end of their stay. The corresponding reimbursement
procedures shall also apply even after the stay or treatment ends;
(d)
the rules set out in Articles 67, 68 and 69 of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004
shall continue to apply, for as long as the conditions are fulfilled, to awards
of family benefits to which there is entitlement at the end of the transition
period for the following persons:
(i) Union citizens, stateless persons and
refugees residing in a Member State as well as nationals of third countries who
fulfil the conditions of Regulation (EC) No 859/2003 and reside in a Member
State, who are subject to the legislation of a Member State and have family
members residing in the United Kingdom at the end of the transition period;
(ii) United Kingdom nationals, as well as
stateless persons and refugees residing in the United Kingdom and nationals of
third countries who fulfil the conditions of Regulation (EC) No 859/2003 and
reside in the United Kingdom, who are subject to the legislation of the United
Kingdom and have family members residing in a Member State at the end of the
transition period;
(e)
in the situations set out in point (d)(i) and (ii) of this paragraph, for any
persons who have rights as family members at the end of the transition period
under Regulation (EC) No 883/2004, such as derived rights for sickness benefits
in kind, that Regulation and the corresponding provisions of Regulation (EC) No
987/2009 shall continue to apply for as long as the conditions provided therein
are fulfilled.
2.
The provisions of Chapter 1 of Title III of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 as
regards sickness benefits shall apply to persons receiving benefits under point
(a) of paragraph 1 of this Article.
This
paragraph shall apply mutatis mutandis as regards family benefits based on
Articles 67, 68 and 69 of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004.
Article 33
Nationals of Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway
and Switzerland
1.
The provisions of this Title applicable to Union citizens shall apply to
nationals of Iceland, the Principality of Liechtenstein, the Kingdom of Norway,
and the Swiss Confederation provided that:
(a)
Iceland, the Principality of Liechtenstein, the Kingdom of Norway, and the
Swiss Confederation, as applicable, have concluded and apply corresponding
agreements with the United Kingdom which apply to Union citizens; and
(b)
Iceland, the Principality of Liechtenstein, the Kingdom of Norway, and the
Swiss Confederation, as applicable, have concluded and apply corresponding
agreements with the Union which apply to United Kingdom nationals.
2.
Upon notification from the United Kingdom and from the Union of the date of
entry into force of the agreements referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article,
the Joint Committee established by Article 164 ("Joint Committee")
shall set the date from which the provisions of this Title shall apply to the
nationals of Iceland, the Principality of Liechtenstein, the Kingdom of Norway,
and the Swiss Confederation, as applicable.
Comments: the
UK has negotiated treaties with the non-EU States concerned, although it is not
known whether those States have agreed parallel treaties with the EU to cover
UK citizens. In light of the approach of the transitional period to pre-existing
treaties between the EU and non-EU countries, it might not be necessary to
apply this Article before the end of the transition period.
Article 34
Administrative cooperation
1.
By way of derogation from Articles 7 and 128(1), as of the date of entry into
force of this Agreement, the United Kingdom shall have the status of observer
in the Administrative Commission. It may, where the items on the agenda
relating to this Title concern the United Kingdom, send a representative, to be
present in an advisory capacity, to the meetings of the Administrative
Commission and to the meetings of the bodies referred to in Articles 73 and 74
of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 where such items are discussed.
2.
By way of derogation from Article 8, the United Kingdom shall take part in the
Electronic Exchange of Social Security Information (EESSI) and bear the related
costs.
Comments: Articles 7 and 8 were annotated above. Note that,
as confirmed by Article 185 of the withdrawal agreement, para 1 applies from
Brexit day, rather than the end of the transition period.
Article 35
Reimbursement, recovery and offsetting
The
provisions of Regulations (EC) No 883/2004 and (EC) No 987/2009 on
reimbursement, recovery and offsetting shall continue to apply in relation to
events, in so far as they relate to persons not covered by Article 30, that:
(a)
occurred before the end of the transition period; or
(b) occur after the end of the
transition period and relate to persons who were covered by Articles 30 or 32
when the event occurred.
Comments:
The cross-reference to the legislation means that Articles 4 and 5 apply.
Article 36
Development of law and adaptations of Union acts
1.
Where Regulations (EC) No 883/2004 and (EC) No 987/2009 are amended or replaced
after the end of the transition period, references to those Regulations in this
Agreement shall be understood as referring to those Regulations as amended or
replaced, in accordance with the acts listed in Part II of Annex I to this
Agreement.
The
Joint Committee shall revise Part II of Annex I to this Agreement and align it
to any act amending or replacing Regulations (EC) No 883/2004 and (EC) No
987/2009 as soon as such act is adopted by the Union. To that end, the Union
shall, as soon as possible after adoption, inform the United Kingdom within the
Joint Committee of any act amending or replacing those Regulations.
2.
By way of derogation from the second subparagraph of paragraph 1, the Joint
Committee shall assess the effects of an act amending or replacing Regulations
(EC) No 883/2004 and (EC) No 987/2009 where that act:
(a)
amends or replaces the matters covered by Article 3 of Regulation (EC) No
883/2004; or
(b)
makes a cash benefit exportable where that cash benefit was non-exportable
under Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 at the end of the transition period, or makes
a cash benefit non-exportable, where that cash benefit was exportable at the
end of the transition period; or
(c)
makes a cash benefit exportable for an unlimited period of time, where that
cash benefit was exportable only for a limited period of time under Regulation
(EC) No 883/2004 at the end of the transition period, or makes a cash benefit
exportable only for a limited period of time, where that cash benefit was
exportable for an unlimited period of time under that Regulation at the end of
the transition period.
In
making its assessment, the Joint Committee shall consider in good faith the
scale of the changes referred to in the first subparagraph of this paragraph,
as well as the importance of the continued good functioning of Regulations (EC)
No 883/2004 and (EC) No 987/2009 between the Union and the United Kingdom and
the importance of there being a competent State in relation to individuals
within the scope of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004.
If
the Joint Committee so decides within 6 months from receiving the information
given by the Union pursuant to paragraph 1, Part II of Annex I to this
Agreement shall not be aligned to the act referred to in the first subparagraph
of this paragraph.
For
the purposes of this paragraph:
(a)
"exportable" means payable under Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 to or in
relation to a person residing in a Member State or in the United Kingdom if the
institution responsible for providing the benefit is not situated there;
"non-exportable" shall be interpreted accordingly; and
(b)
"exportable for an unlimited period of time" means exportable for as
long as the conditions giving rise to the entitlements are met.
3.
Regulations (EC) No 883/2004 and (EC) No 987/2009 shall, for the purposes of
this Agreement, be understood as comprising the adaptations listed in Part III
of Annex I to this Agreement. As soon as possible after the adoption of any
changes in domestic provisions of relevance to Part III of Annex I to this
Agreement, the United Kingdom shall inform the Union thereof within the Joint
Committee.
4. The Decisions and Recommendations
of the Administrative Commission shall, for the purposes of this Agreement, be
understood as comprising the decisions and recommendations listed in Part I of
Annex I. The Joint Committee shall amend Part I of Annex I to reflect any new
Decision or Recommendation adopted by the Administrative Commission. To that
end, as soon as possible after adoption of decisions and recommendations of the
Administrative Commission, the Union shall inform the United Kingdom thereof
within the Joint Committee. Such amendments shall be made by the Joint
Committee on a proposal of the Union or the United Kingdom.
Comments: The Joint Committee is established by Article 164.
The measures concerned may in practice be filtered through the specialised
sub-committee on citizens’ rights, referred to in Article 165. Joint Committee
decisions are binding and have the same legal effect as the main Agreement, as
set out in Article 166.
TITLE IV
OTHER PROVISIONS
Article 37
Publicity
The Member States and the United Kingdom shall
disseminate information concerning the rights and obligations of persons
covered by this Part, in particular by means of awareness-raising campaigns
conducted, as appropriate, through national and local media and other means of
communication.
Comment: This text is identical to Article 34 of the
citizens’ Directive, adapted to the specific circumstances of this Agreement.
The reference to the media is sadly ironic in light of shrieking and misleading
reporting about EU27 citizens often found in some UK newspapers.
Article 38
More favourable provisions
1.
This Part shall not affect any laws, regulations or administrative provisions
applicable in a host State or a State of work which would be more favourable to
the persons concerned. This paragraph shall not apply to Title III.
2.
Article 12 and Article 23(1) shall be without prejudice to the Common Travel
Area arrangements between the United Kingdom and Ireland as regards more
favourable treatment which may result from these arrangements for the persons
concerned.
Comment: Para 1 is effectively identical to Article 37 of
the citizens’ Directive, but does not refer to it expressly. Therefore Articles
4 and 5 of this Agreement on interpretation will not apply. There is an
important substantive issue here: in Ziolkowski,
the CJEU said that more favourable rules applied by Member States were not
incorporated into the system set up by the citizens’ Directive. That raises the
question of whether the UK’s discretion to waive the comprehensive sickness
insurance requirement (see discussion on Article 18), or or deal with Surinder
Singh cases (see discussion on Article 9) will bring the persons concerned
within the scope of the rights in the Withdrawal Agreement, or whether their
position will remain solely based on national law. In the absence of a
cross-reference to EU law, that will not necessarily be the correct
interpretation of this clause, but it is a risk. Note that para 1 does not
apply to Title III, which deals with social security (Articles 28-31).
As for para 2, the common travel area is not referred to in the citizens’ Directive, but it is referred to in a Protocol attached to the Treaties and in the Irish border Protocol attached to the withdrawal agreement.
Article 39
Life-long protection
The persons covered by this Part shall
enjoy the rights provided for in the relevant Titles of this Part for their
lifetime, unless they cease to meet the conditions set out in those Titles.
Thanks Steve. I really enjoyed reading this post. It was very through and comprehensive. There are some really fascinating and interesting issues raised, especially around the scope of family members falling within or outside the Withdrawal Agreement. For instance re Article 10(e)(i) is a child was born in the UK to non-settled EU national parents where the child initially lived in the UK as an EU National family member of their parents but later registered to become a UK citizen, still now considered to be residing in the UK under EU law as at the end of the transition period (and so covered under the Withdrawal Agreement) or does their later becoming a UK citizen mean that they are now residing under UK law (or are they residing under both EU and UK law)? If they are now residing under UK law only, would the answer be different if they had applied for and obtained EEA residence documentation before becoming a UK citizen (I assume not due to Article 25 of the citizens directive) and does Article 13(2) have any impact on that)? Finally if they are still residing in the UK under EU law or both EU and UK law, what would be the position of a child born after their EU National parents became settled such that the child was automatically a dual EU/UK national at birth? Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThanks. I think the answer to those questions is probably to answer them by analogy with the Lounes judgment, but we can't be sure in the absence of case law on the point.
DeleteSorry but do you mean when you say "by analogy with the Lounes judgement" that you think they would likely be dealt with in a way similar to Lounes (i.e they they are residing in the UK under both EU and UK law)? Clearly if the dual EU/UK national children had grown up and were now independent adults, they would not be covered by the WA as McCarthy would apply (and this is confirmed by the EU guidance which you helpfully provided a link to (page 5)). Nor would it seem that a dual EU/UK national child born in the UK could be covered under the WA in their own right under Article 10(a), but it seems that they could satisfy the requirements in Article 10(e)(i) to be a family member residing in the UK under EU law as at the end of the transition period, simply by continuing to reside in the UK as the child of an EU National parent who themselves satisfies the requirements of Article 10(a). Interestingly, Article 9 also defines family members to be regarded as such such, irrespectively of their nationality.
DeleteThe guidance is not binding of course - I think someone might want to litigate the view that the McCarthy case would apply, rather than the Lounes case, to dual citizens in this scenario.
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