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Anger and intolerance are the enemies of correct understanding.
Mahatma Gandhi
Anger and intolerance are the enemies of correct understanding.
Mahatma Gandhi
Given that the OP has been in the UK for the past eight years, he would likely be covered by the McCarthy transitional arrangements. So, for the purpose of this thread, his partner's British nationality likely does not matter.irishsea wrote: When we entered a civil partnership 8 years ago we did so under the EEA Irish passport. We had absolutely no issues and it was a fast and painless process to get my first residence card and right to work.BTW I have lived in the UK 8 years.
My partner held both the first time we applied and were successful..are you saying that they were wrong the first time? You are allowed to hold both passports as a birth right of living in Northern Ireland.Your partner would only be considered to be eligible to sponsor you under the EEA rules if they only held an Irish passport and not a British one.
See secret.simon's post above.secret.simon wrote:Given that the OP has been in the UK for the past eight years, he would likely be covered by the McCarthy transitional arrangements. So, for the purpose of this thread, his partner's British nationality likely does not matter.irishsea wrote: When we entered a civil partnership 8 years ago we did so under the EEA Irish passport. We had absolutely no issues and it was a fast and painless process to get my first residence card and right to work.BTW I have lived in the UK 8 years.
Did your British/Irish partner have CSI aka private health insurance? When did your British/Irish partner become incapacitated/unable to work? Did he work or was he self-employed before then?
She has lived in Northern Ireland all her life which has the NHS so private healthcare was never needed, but people in the republic of Ireland do pay for healthcare, not the north. She became unable to work around 5 years ago and was working until she had a break down and has suffered greatly since although she has been on an unemployment program for a few months now ( they help people who have physical and mental problems back into employment ) she was refused job seekers because i earned enough, in their eyes, to support us both and also refused ESA...applied for DLA also, dont get me started on that as I believe you need to be almost on your death bed before you get anything.secret.simon wrote:Given that the OP has been in the UK for the past eight years, he would likely be covered by the McCarthy transitional arrangements. So, for the purpose of this thread, his partner's British nationality likely does not matter.irishsea wrote: When we entered a civil partnership 8 years ago we did so under the EEA Irish passport. We had absolutely no issues and it was a fast and painless process to get my first residence card and right to work.BTW I have lived in the UK 8 years.
Did your British/Irish partner have CSI aka private health insurance? When did your British/Irish partner become incapacitated/unable to work? Did he work or was he self-employed before then?
Anger and intolerance are the enemies of correct understanding.
Mahatma Gandhi
As the residence card must have been applied before by April 2012 and was granted, Irishsea is covered in that respect by the McCarthy Transitional Arrangements (Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2016 Schedule 6 Regulation 9).chriskv1 wrote:I know they are allowed both British and Irish nationality. But as many others on this forum would tell you :
An EEA national is :
A national of an EEA State who is not also a British citizen;
I don't think that the home office knows that your spouse/partner has a British passport.
I'm afraid you're not eligible to be on the EEA route at all and should apply under the UK route.
It is the citizenships and nationalities held, not passports held, that matters.chriskv1 wrote:Your partner would only be considered to be eligible to sponsor you under the EEA rules if they only held an Irish passport and not a British one.
Anger and intolerance are the enemies of correct understanding.
Mahatma Gandhi
irishsea wrote:She has lived in Northern Ireland all her life which has the NHS so private healthcare was never needed, but people in the republic of Ireland do pay for healthcare, not the north. She became unable to work around 5 years ago and was working until she had a break down and has suffered greatly since although she has been on an unemployment program for a few months now ( they help people who have physical and mental problems back into employment ) she was refused job seekers because i earned enough, in their eyes, to support us both and also refused ESA...applied for DLA also, dont get me started on that as I believe you need to be almost on your death bed before you get anything.secret.simon wrote:Given that the OP has been in the UK for the past eight years, he would likely be covered by the McCarthy transitional arrangements. So, for the purpose of this thread, his partner's British nationality likely does not matter.irishsea wrote: When we entered a civil partnership 8 years ago we did so under the EEA Irish passport. We had absolutely no issues and it was a fast and painless process to get my first residence card and right to work.BTW I have lived in the UK 8 years.
Did your British/Irish partner have CSI aka private health insurance? When did your British/Irish partner become incapacitated/unable to work? Did he work or was he self-employed before then?
I was actually meaning they identify as Irish as they live in Northern Ireland and hold both passports. Sorry if I wasnt coming across clearly.chriskv1 wrote:@Richard:
Ah yes, When I said passport I did mean nationality. But since irishsea was referring to his/her partner's nationalities as passports, I didn't want to confuse him/her further and just kept referring to it as passports.
I do understand that it's technically wrong for me to do it.
Also, If Irishsea got his/her first RC only on June 2012 (after an application being made on the 5th of April), Doesn't that mean he/she is ineligible to qualify under transitional arrangements?
Or did the transitional arrangements cover people who applied for RC up until the 30th of April?
So, the relevant bit of the regulations is Sched 6 Reg. 9(3):irishsea wrote:My first residence card was granted in June 2012. I just dug through the paperwork and my first residence card application letter was 5th April 2012.
To the OP: Does your partner meet any of these requirements?EEA Regulations 2016 wrote: 5.—(1) In these Regulations, “worker or self-employed person who has ceased activity” means an EEA national who satisfies a condition in paragraph (2), (3), (4) or (5).
...
(3) The condition in this paragraph is that the person terminates activity in the United Kingdom as a worker or self-employed person as a result of permanent incapacity to work; and—...
- (a) had resided in the United Kingdom continuously for more than two years prior to the termination; or
(b) the incapacity is the result of an accident at work or an occupational disease that entitles the person to a pension payable in full or in part by an institution in the United Kingdom.
6.—(2) A person who is no longer working must continue to be treated as a worker provided that the person—
- (a) is temporarily unable to work as the result of an illness or accident;...
I don't see anything in the regulation that would prevent being treated as a 'permanent resident' any more than preventing being treated as a 'qualified person'.secret.simon wrote:However, it is worth remembering that the rights of EEA citizens to reside in and to sponsor family members is not unconditional. They must either be a qualified person or hold PR in the UK. I am not sure if a dual British/EEA citizen can hold PR under the EEA Regulations in the UK (as s/he is only treated as if an EEA Citizen for the purpose of the residence of the family members). Hence, I believe (I could be wrong) that such an dual British/EEA citizen (such as the OP's partner) must be a qualified person for all the time that their family members are resident in the UK, until the family member (in this case, the OP) acquire PR in their own stead.
Richard W wrote:I don't see anything in the regulation that would prevent being treated as a 'permanent resident' any more than preventing being treated as a 'qualified person'.
This sub-section seems to suggest that other provisions of the EEA Regulations would not apply to P (in this case, the OP's partner), a dual British/Irish citizen. Therefore, P cannot acquire PR under the EEA Regulations.Schedule 6, Section 9 wrote:(8) P will only continue to be regarded as an EEA national for the purpose of considering the position of F under these Regulations.
It wouldn't be real PR. It would be a virtual PR valid only for considering the OP's rights.secret.simon wrote:This sub-section seems to suggest that other provisions of the EEA Regulations would not apply to P (in this case, the OP's partner), a dual British/Irish citizen. Therefore, P cannot acquire PR under the EEA Regulations.
The directive also governs the rules for right of residence. Schedule 6 Paragraph 9 is a voluntary addition to the rights of residence, because of the earlier mistaken treatment of everyone holding a non-British EU citizenship as an EEA national. Your argument surely also implies that the OP cannot possibly acquire PR, which we know is wrong.secret.simon wrote:Also, Directive 2004/38/EC, which governs rules for acquisition of PR, specifically states that it (the directive) applies only to EEA citizens who reside in member-states of which they are not citizens. Therefore, EEA citizens resident in a member-state of which they are a citizen cannot acquire PR under the Directive.
A narrow interpretation would say that the OP's residence card, as such, should have been rescinded and replaced by something different, for it granted the OP rights in other EEA countries to which she was not entitled. Oddly enough, this wouldn't directly apply to a permanent residence card, as by the directive it conveys no such rights.The provisions of this Directive shall not affect any laws, regulations or administrative provisions laid down by a Member State which would be more favourable to the persons covered by this Directive.