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Of course you can use him! The requirement is 5 years residence in accordance with the regulations as a qualified person or family member, and as you have noted, he was in fact your sponsor at the time. His subsequently becoming British does not invalidate that sponsorship. (Indeed, it is even possible that the EUCJ will decide that he could still sponsor you - we should get a verdict in the Autumn, in the Toufik Lounes case.)andorus wrote: ↑Mon Aug 21, 2017 7:58 pm... just forgotten to mention while having PR I can apply for BC now (I am married to BC who is dual EU/BC citizen from Nov 16'). Also a bit frustrating bit as I can't use my spouse as sponsor due to the fact of him being BC now (not even for the period of my 5 months where he was indeed my sponsor?!)
There is no contradiction. The point is that he was your sponsor in the past, before he was a British Citizen. The relevant regulation is:
You are an EEA national who has resided in the United Kingdom in accordance with the EEA Regulation for a continuous period of five years. For some of the time you needed a sponsor; for most of it, you did not.Regulation 15(1)(a) wrote:15.—(1) The following persons acquire the right to reside in the United Kingdom permanently—
(a)an EEA national who has resided in the United Kingdom in accordance with these Regulations for a continuous period of five years;
...
We had a lengthy discussion on the topic. In the end, we discovered that, in 2015 at least, the Home Office interpretation was that it did apply when the sponsor subsequently acquired British nationality. However, it wouldn't apply to you unless you held a residence certificate in 2012. I'd be surprised if you did; most EEA nationals didn't.andorus wrote: ↑Thu Sep 07, 2017 7:19 pmThank you for your comments.
I have found one discussion post with Home Office on similar matter - please have a look below:
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... ily_member
Please let me know your thoughts on it.
Yes, you can use him for that period to qualify for PR. Indeed, if he still has his EU citizenship, you can use him to qualify for a DCPR. (Actually, submitting his British passport would satisfy the letter of the EEA Regulations! However, I don't recommend it if he retains his original nationality.)
1. Unless you have an RC pertaining to 2012, it is irrelevant.andorus wrote: ↑Sat Sep 09, 2017 8:34 amHi Richard,
Thanks for that.
I am still a bit confused by the note:
To note: It remains the position that the transitional arrangements do not apply in
circumstances where a dual EEA/British citizen marries their family member after
the transitional arrangements have ended. These cases will continue to fall
outside the scope of the Regulations.
So what 5 months are you referring to? How was he your sponsor in Jan-May 2015?
To use your husband as sponsor, you would have to argue that your time as an unrecognised durable partner should count as being a family member, in accordance with the precedent at SSHD v. Idrissa Kamagate (mentioned in eea-route-applications/eea4-pr-applicat ... 38512.html) for time spent as a subsequently recognised durable partner to be treated as time spent as a family member. Thus rather than merely applying for the recognition of the fact of having acquired PR, you would first be applying for the retrospective grant of the status of or recognition as a family member. I don't think it would succeed, but I may well be wrong.
The decision in Idrissa Kamagate is not widely known; I have not heard of any mention of it in Home Office instructions. I fear you would be close to establishing new law, which is usually an expensive way to do things.