I think a reasonable summary is my post of 1st March in the thread "New EU deal: Free-movement rights gone?".secret.simon wrote:Can I suggest that you write a short piece, with relevant links, explaining what Metock is and how it would impact EEA migrants and those on the SS route.
And the amendments aren't simple to draft. The declaration doesn't specify the precise changes that will be made. The most natural aim should be that free movement should essential be for movement between member states. It may be rather like Surinder Singh, but applied to all EU citizens, not just citizens of the host country, and starting the process will be rather more difficult. For the initial immigration, a requirement such as "the sponsor shall be settled" is rather discriminatory given the current UK definition of 'settled', and that may need to be addressed. If the amendment doesn't address it, I think the ECJ will, eventually.secret.simon wrote:To the best of my knowledge, the UK-EU deal plans to get around Metock by issuing what it calls a legally binding decision of the European Council.
I don't see how you deduce that. The relevant text relating to Metock is on p35 of that document (the 36th page in the PDF document), where it saysAs far as I understand, that enactment will require the approval of the European Parliament.European Commission wrote:The Commission intends to adopt a proposal to complement Directive 2004/38 on free movement of Union citizens in order to exclude, from the scope of free movement rights, third country nationals who had no prior lawful residence in a Member State before marrying a Union citizen or who marry a Union citizen only after the Union citizen has established residence in the host Member State. Accordingly, in such cases, the host Member State's immigration law will apply to the third country national.
secret.simon wrote:To overrule Metock, which is a judgment on the interpretation of Directive 2004/38/EC, an equivalent judgment or a new directive would be needed. The first is unlikely, while the second would need to be drafted by the European Commission and cleared by both the Council of the European Union (relatively easily done, given that the European Council has approved the document linked to above) and the European Parliament, which would take a while (given that its President is quite hostile to the whole deal). So, it ain't gonna happen in a hurry.
The pre-Metock defences of the UK relied on keeping non-EEA family members away from the UK border. At present, rail and ferry links with the continent are a weak point; people have learnt how to reach the UK border in France and get an 'EEA Regulation stamp'.