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As far as I know, the decision has not been validated in the Supreme Court, and they are appealing the high court decision...some people who used a solicitor to send in their applications for a residence card seem to have received the 2 year stamp4...My advice for you would be to move to the UK or Northern Ireland (part of the UK). They are more advanced and straightforward in dealing with immigration and the Irish seem to stuck in the last century...they are definitely not a part of Modern Europe. If you are really keen on coming to Ireland, then a residence card from France should make it easier...bear in mind he would still have to wait for atleast 6 months for the Irish Government to issue him with a residence card .BigAppleWoodenShoe wrote: This decision was just ruled on in the Irish supreme court. I think as long as he has a French residence card, he should be fine.
hi aureliebgaureliebg wrote:Did I dream it or I saw that the non eu spouse should have resided legally for 6 months in another member state???
That way, having the French residence card would only help for half of the problem. Would we need to spend 6 months in France before filing the application in Ireland? Or do both in parallel?
I think that's correct, you need to have resided legally in another member state for 6 months. And when you finally come to Ireland, you need to wait another 6 months at least before the residence card application has been approved (or denied...). As for Irish Embassies... my advice is, don't contact them! The embassies don't seem to be informed at all and give misleading information. The embassies for example don't seem to be aware of the requirement that you need to have resided in another member state at all. I wouldn't trust their information.aureliebg wrote:Did I dream it or I saw that the non eu spouse should have resided legally for 6 months in another member state???
That way, having the French residence card would only help for half of the problem. Would we need to spend 6 months in France before filing the application in Ireland? Or do both in parallel?
That's a good idea. But he will have to attend 'integration classes' in France, and the Irish government will probably hold on to his passport for a while.aureliebg wrote:Could I land in France, ask for the residence card, then fly to Dublin and ask there for the residence card and go back to france where we both can work? If I get the French one first, then I just add it to the file in Dublin.
What do you think?
I don't think the Irish government is really picky about 6months residency in another E.U country...they only want to see an residence card from another E.U country...Dimy77 wrote:I think that's correct, you need to have resided legally in another member state for 6 months.