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Being British and resident in the UK generally means you can't take advantage of EEA law for your family members. EEA law normally applies to an EEA citizen living in another EEA country other than his or her own. So the same rule limits a German in Germany and a Hungarian in Hungary. There are some exceptions, but they would have required you to live/work in another EEA state with your wife for a while then return to the UK to live, which isn't the situation you're in.
See above. There's no scenario I can think of in which the UK government would ever give a UK-only citizen PR under the EEA rules.
That requires 10 years residence 'not in breach of the immigration laws'. When she was not a qualified person and had not been outside the UK in the past three months, she needed leave to remain and did not have it. She was therefore 'in breach of the immigration laws' as defined by the Immigration Rules, which is less strict in this respect than the British Nationality Act 1981 as it currently stands.GMB wrote: ↑Wed Jan 24, 2018 4:06 pmI think your best bet is for her to apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain under the UK domestic rules, under 10-year long residence. The form is SET(LR). It is much more expensive, she has to take the Life in the UK test and may have to prove English proficiency, but it can be done same-day and unlike PR under the EEA rules, nothing to do with BREXIT could cause her to lose ILR.
She needs CSI to be self-sufficient. However, when time comes to apply for leave to remain as part of the Brexit transition arrangements, she may be able to apply for settled status because apparently CSI won't be insisted on, as I said last week. However, the mention of lawful residence in this context seems contradictory.GMB wrote: ↑Fri Jan 26, 2018 8:14 amShe should be able to cover that gap by claiming self-sufficiency based on spouse's income. That is identified as a means of exercising treaty rights in some of the HO directives I've read. I don't recall if that requires the person to have health insurance or not, however.