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Dual nationals who are British are not considered EEA nationals (in the context of EU migration for family members) unless certain exceptions apply.Salem wrote:Hi,
I am a dual national, I was born in Northern Ireland, and legally hold both an Irish and UK Passport. I currently live in London and have used by Irish Passport to bring my non EU wife to live here with me via family permit, and she is now 3 years into her 5 year residents card. My question is, can I use my UK passport to register our newly born daughter, as I have to send my wife's non eu passport as well in the application, and will that cause an issue when they see her resident's card although it will be with a UK passport? The Passport Office know I legally have two passports, but can I 'switch' like that no problem? I suppose if I only had to send my passport with our baby's application it would be ok, but from reading it seems I need to certainly send my wife's, although maybe just impute my UK Passport details?
Thanks
Definitely still the case. Maybe he used ta's or SS?I was under the impression HO didn't treat dual nationality UK citizens as EEA citizens in this context so unsure if the family permit was legitimate? Unless that rule has changed only recently?
HiNoetic wrote:I was under the impression HO didn't treat dual nationality UK citizens as EEA citizens in this context so unsure if the family permit was legitimate? Unless that rule has changed only recently?
Oh yes, if the family permit is legit because you invoked ta's then you can of course use your British passport nowNo i think you are mistaken. If you're talking about the McCarthy judgement, my wife's application was before that was enforced, hence she benefited from the transitional rules, and will stay on those. I can assure you that both the Family Permit and her Residence Card are both fine under my Irish Passport exercising my treaty rights. I think that Judgement was successfully challenged not so long ago anyway.
I just want to know If I can 'switch' like that on the application? I don't think it would be a problem, as it's to do with my child, and I can and do legally hold both passports. But was just looking for opinions or confirmation.
Hi,LilyLalilu wrote:Definitely still the case. Maybe he used ta's or SS?I was under the impression HO didn't treat dual nationality UK citizens as EEA citizens in this context so unsure if the family permit was legitimate? Unless that rule has changed only recently?
I'm not sure how it works but I believe Irish citizens are regarded settled on arrival in the UK - so maybe you could use your Irish passport to claim your child's BC too? As in a child born in the UK to a settled person? Just an amateur idea, not sure if this actually works...
Regarding...Salem wrote:Hi,
Yes, my wife is under the McCarthy TA's and will always stay on them. Though as far as I'm aware the McCarthy judgement was successfully challenged not so long ago anyway. Though I don't want to sidetrack the thread in that direction.
Ok, thanks for mentioning about Irish being classed as settled on arrival, I wasn't aware of that, though I'd like some confirmation that it would actually work before I went that way, if anyone has any idea where to get that?
I can prove I've exercised my treaty rights for the 5 years, I have worked in the public sector for the past 9 years, but I was just trying to make it easier/simpler, hence wondering if I could use my UK Passport? I think I could, as it's do with my child's passport, not my wife's visa, and my dual national status is fully legal. Though as I say, just hoping for confirmation.
Thanks
- search the forum, its been discussed quite recently.Ok, thanks for mentioning about Irish being classed as settled on arrival, I wasn't aware of that, though I'd like some confirmation that it would actually work before I went that way, if anyone has any idea where to get that?
Hi,noajthan wrote:Regarding...Salem wrote:Hi,
Yes, my wife is under the McCarthy TA's and will always stay on them. Though as far as I'm aware the McCarthy judgement was successfully challenged not so long ago anyway. Though I don't want to sidetrack the thread in that direction.
Ok, thanks for mentioning about Irish being classed as settled on arrival, I wasn't aware of that, though I'd like some confirmation that it would actually work before I went that way, if anyone has any idea where to get that?
I can prove I've exercised my treaty rights for the 5 years, I have worked in the public sector for the past 9 years, but I was just trying to make it easier/simpler, hence wondering if I could use my UK Passport? I think I could, as it's do with my child's passport, not my wife's visa, and my dual national status is fully legal. Though as I say, just hoping for confirmation.
Thanks- search the forum, its been discussed quite recently.Ok, thanks for mentioning about Irish being classed as settled on arrival, I wasn't aware of that, though I'd like some confirmation that it would actually work before I went that way, if anyone has any idea where to get that?
Your McCarthy ta only applies to wife (as baby wasn't born at relevant invocation time) and (from memory) just for as long as you are married and you/she remain in UK & etc etc.
My understanding is your relationship with your child can be as a British father as that has nothing to do with your wife's status.
Anyway you are actually using your Britishness (transformed into EEA-ness by virtue of McCarthy) for your wife.
So you are not actually using your Irish passport for anything as far as I can see. Bit of a puzzle why you used it for FP because if that was pre-McCarthy you could have used your then 'EEA'-British passport.
A cogent cover note to explain may help or else just wing it; depends how risk-averse you are really.
PS By "register baby" I assume you simply mean apply directly for her passport(?).
She is already British (& Irish ofcourse) so no need to register her as a British minor.
Before the need for the McCarthy ta (ie pre-McCarthy 2012), BCs were also treated as EEA nationals (in the context of migration).Salem wrote:Hi,
...
I don't understand your 'EEA-British Passport' pre-McCarthy statement. I had to use my Irish passport to go via the FP/RC route, as I could not bring my non EU wife to the UK on that route with my British Passport as far as I'm aware.
...
Thanks for your impute.
Er, no. From the original 2006 regulations:noajthan wrote:Before the need for the McCarthy ta (ie pre-McCarthy 2012), BCs were also treated as EEA nationals (in the context of migration).
So your British passport was in effect the passport of an EEA citizen too (hence it was an 'EEA-British' passport as I put it).
Thus Salem qualified as an EEA national because he is a national of Ireland, but most British citizens didn't because they are citizens of the United Kingdom only.“EEA national” means a national of an EEA State;
“EEA State” means—
(a) a member State, other than the United Kingdom;
(b) Norway, Iceland or Liechtenstein; or
(c) Switzerland;
Main point stands: relationship of father as BC to baby as a BC minor is independent of the relationship of husband as EEA sponsor to non-EEA wife.Where these Regulations apply to the family member of a United Kingdom national the United Kingdom national shall be treated as holding a valid passport issued by an EEA State for the purpose of the application of regulation 13 to that family member
^^^^^^^Salem wrote:Hi everyone, thanks for your input, and it looks like I can use my UK Passport then. I'll just draft a brief cover letter to head off any potential misunderstanding.
I have one related query.
I think no matter the outcome of the referendum it will have implications on non EU family members going down the route we have went, either Cameron's negotiation or if a Leave vote wins and it gets scrapped etc. So my question is, with our baby born in the UK and she will get a UK passport, if 'hypothetically' the FP/RC/PR route is closed to my non EU wife for whatever reason, what other options are there for her/us to stay in the UK as a family taking into consideration our daughter and my daughter's status? I have read somewhere that the mother cannot be separated from the child, is this true, and if so, is it also a EU directive that could be scrapped dependent on the referendum result, or is it a UK based rule? Are there any other rules or avenues now open to us because of our child?
Yes I could start afresh and go down the UK settlement route, although I think it's costly, then there's Life in the UK test etc, so I'm really trying to plan ahead and know where we stand, what we can do in whatever eventuality, and hoping to avoid the UK settlement route.
Again, thanks in advance
You're basically looking at the right to a family life. The child-based route is the 10-year route to settlement, with the relevant rule being EX.1(a) (in Appendix FM of the Immigration Rules):Salem wrote:... if 'hypothetically' the FP/RC/PR route is closed to my non EU wife for whatever reason, what other options are there for her/us to stay in the UK as a family taking into consideration our daughter and my daughter's status? I have read somewhere that the mother cannot be separated from the child, is this true, and if so, is it also a EU directive that could be scrapped dependent on the referendum result, or is it a UK based rule? Are there any other rules or avenues now open to us because of our child?
The Zambrano judgement makes it generally unreasonable to require a British citizen child to leave the country, so there may be an EU element even to this rule.EX.1. This paragraph applies if
(a)
(i) the applicant has a genuine and subsisting parental relationship with a child who-
(aa) is under the age of 18 years, or was under the age of 18 years when the applicant was first granted leave on the basis that this paragraph applied;
(bb) is in the UK;
(cc) is a British Citizen or has lived in the UK continuously for at least the 7 years immediately preceding the date of application ;and
(ii) it would not be reasonable to expect the child to leave the UK; or
(b) <snip>
Thanks,Richard W wrote:You're basically looking at the right to a family life. The child-based route is the 10-year route to settlement, with the relevant rule being EX.1(a) (in Appendix FM of the Immigration Rules):Salem wrote:... if 'hypothetically' the FP/RC/PR route is closed to my non EU wife for whatever reason, what other options are there for her/us to stay in the UK as a family taking into consideration our daughter and my daughter's status? I have read somewhere that the mother cannot be separated from the child, is this true, and if so, is it also a EU directive that could be scrapped dependent on the referendum result, or is it a UK based rule? Are there any other rules or avenues now open to us because of our child?The Zambrano judgement makes it generally unreasonable to require a British citizen child to leave the country, so there may be an EU element even to this rule.EX.1. This paragraph applies if
(a)
(i) the applicant has a genuine and subsisting parental relationship with a child who-
(aa) is under the age of 18 years, or was under the age of 18 years when the applicant was first granted leave on the basis that this paragraph applied;
(bb) is in the UK;
(cc) is a British Citizen or has lived in the UK continuously for at least the 7 years immediately preceding the date of application ;and
(ii) it would not be reasonable to expect the child to leave the UK; or
(b) <snip>
I suppose you'd call it the family members' or family 're-unification' route. These routes are under the Immigration Rules, and have very little input from EU law. If your finances were sound, you'd apply on the 5-year route, using FLR(M), and your daughter would be of little to no relevance, except in so far as as she needed accommodating. If your wife does not meet the requirements, the 10-year route will automatically be considered, or you can apply directly on FLR(FP). These routes don't avoid the English language requirement or LitUK for ILR; they can only be avoided by the old age exemption.Salem wrote:And pardon my ignorance about this, but what route would that be under? I mean if we needed to do this, basically how would we go about it, what forms etc, how or where would we apply?