secret.simon wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2018 7:56 pmWere treaty rights exercised by you at any point?sadmanonatrain wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2018 7:44 pmCan I as a dual UK/EU national at birth, bring my wife (non-EU) to the UK? I've only lived said countries (EU-wise).
A dual British/Irish citizen (or a dual British/EEA citizen) by birth, who has never left the UK/exercised treaty rights in another EEA member-state, is not covered by Lounes, but by the earlier McCarthy judgment and therefore cannot sponsor their spouse under the EEA Regulations.
What Lounes states is that if an EEA citizen exercises treaty rights, moves to the UK and subsequently acquires British citizenship, such a dual British/EEA citizen (who acquired British citizenship after exercising treaty rights in the UK) can continue to sponsor family members through the EEA route.
In other words, exercise of treaty rights in another EEA member-state (either in the UK by a non-UK EEA citizen OR by a UK citizen in another EEA member-state i.e. Surinder Singh) is a requirement for sponsoring family members through the EEA route.
I was born in Germany to a British and German parent. So I have dual citizenship at birth to both countries. When they divorced, my British parent moved 'back' to the UK with us as children. I would have been around 9 I think. Of course I had no choice here, so I doubt that is exercising treaty rights? Or is it? I don't know. I have never lived in worked in any other EU country.Richard W wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2018 9:11 pm
The logic of Surinder Singh says that when a worker with nationalities of A and B moves from A to B, he should be able to take his family with him. I think the CJEU would take that view. However, if the other country is Germany and Sadmanonatrain is living there with his wife, I think the UK will have left the EU before he can get a favourable judgement from the courts. So I fear the practical answer is 'no', but it may be worth applying for a family permit on the off-chance that the HO will say 'yes'.
I think Sadmanonatrain's hijacking of this thread should be spun off to a separate thread.
Since then I've lived and worked in the UK. Though currently I'm abroad trying to return to the UK with my wife who is a non-EU national. The great irony here is my German parent has also been living in the UK for years, with a Latvian spouse, with no problems obviously. So from what I can gather, though I coud be wrong, having dual nationiality isn't any sort of benefit at all in moving back to the UK under some EU law?
Richard your comment interests me a lot, though I don't quite follow. A->B meaning Germany to the UK? That happened once when I was a kid, technically. I currently live outside the EU. So it would be C->B while excersing A's free movement rights? Excuse my naivety there.
Of course, the reason for asking is because doing the actual SS route for me would be silly if I don't need actually need to; due to having dual EU citizenship. Do you or anyone else happen to know if applying for a family permit, and getting denied, affects any future applications? Be it through UK national routes or EU?
Thanks for the time taken to have responded anyway. A very sadmanonatrain.