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Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
Not entirely correct. The government asked Parliament to reject the amendments granting EU citizens an automatic right to remain, but it has stated that it will bring forward a separate Immigration Bill to address those concerns separately. I would expect it alongside the Great Repeal Bill in the next Queen's speech in May-June of this year.eastberks44 wrote:The government would have to legislate specifically to avoid this, which is exactly what it refused to do this week.
There's a lot of speculation about - you cannot prepare on the basis of reports in the media. Until the arrangements for a transition, the repeal bill and the new immigration act are officially enacted and announced there is not much you can do, suffice to say get all your paperwork in order, as far as possible.tmonaghan wrote:I read somewhere that EEA Citizens arriving into the UK prior to Brexit will be considered under EU Law and those who arrived after Brexit will be considered under UK Immigration Law. So if that is the case we would be advised to remember that under EU Law one can only leave the UK for no longer than six months in a twelve months period or for up to twelve months in special circumstances.
I read that £350M a week will spent on the NHS.tmonaghan wrote:I read somewhere that EEA Citizens arriving into the UK prior to Brexit will be considered under EU Law and those who arrived after Brexit will be considered under UK Immigration Law. So if that is the case we would be advised to remember that under EU Law one can only leave the UK for no longer than six months in a twelve months period or for up to twelve months in special circumstances.
Well nobody knows, you'll have to wait and see. Just have patience they say the first thing to be discussed in the upcoming negotiations will be EEA citizens in the UK and British Citizens in the rest of the EEA.tmonaghan wrote:So those prior to Brexit could be permitted to continue exercising their Treaty Rights until the acquirement of PR. However those who arrived after Brexit would fall under UK Immigration Laws
jetzeng wrote:I have EEA PR already, will UK cancel all issued PR after brexit?
Or 5 years on one of the many UK Immigration route visasnew.citizen wrote:Anyone, who has lived in the UK LEGALLY for 10 years can apply for ILR.
Done Settled Statussecret.simon wrote:As an aside to the mods: would this topic be more at home in the Referendum developments forum? It is a generic and wide-ranging question, as opposed to one on an individual's specific circumstances.
I am inclined to agree. It is not improbable that an EU immigration bill may also create specific provisions for naturalising EU citizens. It has happened in the past, with special provisions being created when countries left the Commonwealth (the pre-EU free movement area for the UK), such as the Pakistan Act 1973.Wise wrote:I am confident that all EU resident/family member permits that has been issued before now or that will be issued till the exit day will continue to be valid. But there may be generous transition towards people who have not complete their 5yrs lawful resident in UK to gain from PR provided you are in employment and not on benefits.
+1Wise wrote:People should just calm down