This was a letter recently sent to Guy Verhofstadt by Brandon Lewis (Minister of State for
Security and Deputy for EU Exit and No Deal Preparation). He recently re-tweeted
a link to his missive:
We’re providing certainty for EU citizens. Time for all EU countries to adopt a similar approach for Brits.— Brandon Lewis MP (@BrandonLewis) December 18, 2019
To remind @guyverhofstadt what I said a few months ago 👇https://t.co/zgiuQlf8oG https://t.co/EBkiehI5xt
and I thought inclined to point out its inaccuracies:
(My comments are in dark blue.)
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Guy Verhofstadt
Member of the European Parliament
Brexit Co-ordinator and Chair
Brexit Steering Group
European Parliament Office
1047 Brussels
Member of the European Parliament
Brexit Co-ordinator and Chair
Brexit Steering Group
European Parliament Office
1047 Brussels
13 September 2019
Dear Guy,
CITIZENS’ RIGHTS AND IMMIGRATION
I saw your tweet on 11 September claiming that Home Office
treatment of EU27 citizens is unacceptable and settled status isn’t working. I
wanted to write to put the correct position on record, and to express my
disappointment and frustration that there continues to be misunderstanding
about the EU Settlement Scheme.
There is no misunderstanding. The EU
Settlement Scheme is very well understood by Guy and his colleagues in the
European Parliament.
Such misconceptions, along with inaccurate press coverage,
undermine the reassurances we are seeking to provide to EU citizens in the UK,
generate uncertainty and cause unnecessary worry and stress for individual
citizens.
In the UK, approximately 80% of the
press (by readership)[i]
is pro-Brexit. The current UK government would seem to be in a weak position
when it suggests that its reassurances on Brexit have been undermined by the UK
press. And there has been no suggestion that Die
Welt misreported Mr Lewis’s affirmative answer to their question about
whether people who meet all the conditions for settlement but fail to apply in
time will be deported[ii].
That statement has certainly caused a lot of worry for EU citizens.
Above all, the UK Government wants to reassure EU citizens
in the UK that they are welcome to stay and that we are committed to protecting
their rights. Even if we leave the EU without a deal, the Prime Minister has
made clear that EU citizens living in the UK will have the absolute certainty
of the right to live and remain.
It is hard to reconcile this
statement with the repeated votes in Parliament to deny EU citizens their
rights[iii]
…
or with the refusal of our PM to
honour the promises he made during the Brexit campaign that there would be no change for EU citizens lawfully resident
in the UK; that such citizens would be automatically
be granted settlement; and that they would be treated no less favourably than at present[v]
…
or with Johnson’s recent complaint
that EU citizens “treat the UK as if it's part of their own country”[vi].
Far from “protecting” the rights of
EU citizens, the UK government is abolishing their existing status as of 2020 January 31 and forcing them to apply for new reduced rights. There is no certainty – “absolute” or otherwise. Some
applicants are being turned down outright[vii]
and 43% are only being granted pre-settled status. Citizens who successfully
obtain settled status will thereby
obtain the right to “live and remain” in the UK – providing they do not go
abroad for too long, in which case they will lose their status – but they will
lose other important rights and some of their ability to enforce their rights[viii].
Their rights and the protection of those rights would be further eroded by a
“no deal” exit from the EU.[ix]
We have launched the EU Settlement Scheme to give EU
citizens their rights in UK law, to ensure that they can continue living in the
UK after we leave the EU – deal or no deal. The scheme is set out in
Immigration Rules made under the Immigration Act 1971. The status granted under
the scheme – settled status (indefinite leave to remain) or pre-settled status
(five years’ limited leave to remain) – is a status under UK immigration law
and will guarantee the person the same access to work, study, benefits and
services as they currently have under EU law on free movement.
As noted above, the EU Settlement
Scheme does not “give EU citizens their rights”, it takes some of them away (if applied for successfully), and all of them away (if an application is
refused). Moreover, the EU Settlement Scheme does not guarantee the same access to benefits and services as they
currently have[x]
and the government has recently legislated to take away some entitlements to
benefits from EU citizens with pre-settled status[xi].
The secure evidence of that UK legal status which the EU
Settlement Scheme also provides will ensure that, years from now, EU citizens
and their family members can continue, easily, to prove their status and
exercise the rights and access the entitlements which, deal or no deal, are
protected.
“The secure evidence” is a digital
code which EU citizens who successfully apply for settled status will be given
and which potential employers, landlords, NHS staff etc will have to enter into
a web site in order to establish the legal status of EU citizens they deal
with. No physical card or document will be issued, and this was a key criticism
in the Home Affairs Committee report on the Scheme[xii].
The facts are that the EU Settlement Scheme is working well.
More than 1.5 million people have now applied, according to our internal
figures, and by the end of August more than 1.1 million applicants had been
granted status under the scheme. There is plenty of time to apply – until at
least 31 December 2020 – but we are keen for people to apply as soon as
possible and will shortly be renewing our communications campaign, with a
particular focus on supporting the vulnerable.
Tens, or even hundreds, of thousands
of vulnerable EU citizens (who may have lived in the UK for decades) are going
to miss the December deadline and thereby become liable for incarceration and
deportation.[xiii]
There has been much media speculation about grants of
pre-settled status, including allegations that we are deliberately seeking to
grant pre-settled status to people who are eligible for settled status. I would
like to emphasise that nobody has been granted pre-settled status without first
being offered the opportunity during their application to submit evidence that
they qualify for settled status.
This is a complex issue and there is a dearth of hard information with which to construct an overview of what is
actually going on. There have been stories in the newspapers about individual
cases when deserving – and apparently highly competent people – have failed to
obtain the correct status[xiv]
but, since the Home Office have thus far avoided collecting any data that would
show how many people expecting to get the full status failed to do so, it is
difficult to know how representative the cases in the press are of a general
problem. That being said, in 2018 December, the Home Office change the
interface to include the following question:
The Home Office’s decision to start asking
this question would seem to suggest that – pace Lewis’s remarks – the UK government
have accepted that there has hitherto been a problem.
Pre-settled status aligns with EU law whereby someone
generally only acquires permanent residence status after five years’ continuous
residence. As soon as EU citizens and their families have accrued five years’
continuous residence, they can apply for settled status, which gives them leave
on an indefinite basis. The proportion of those being granted settled and
pre-settled status is broadly in line with expectations, based on the Annual
Population Survey figures for the UK’s resident EEA population.
It is odd that Lewis seeks to
justify UK policy by appealing to EU law. It is usually emphasized that one of
the main aims of this whole exercise is to assert the supremacy of UK law[xv].
There is no reason why a more generous offer could not have been made to EU citizens
who have not lived here for five years, or who have but are unable to evidence this
fact. The insistence on only awarding pre-settled status ensures that there
will be more problems in five years’ time when hundreds of thousands will have to
re-apply.
If any EU citizen feels they or their family member have
erroneously been granted pre-settled status – or if they need help with any
other aspect of their application – I would encourage them to call our
dedicated helpline 0300 123 7379. It is open seven days a week and there are
hundreds of staff standing by, ready to assist with queries.
The provision of a dedicated
helpline is one of the few positive aspects of the settlement scheme, and
perhaps the Home Office might consider its extension to help EU citizens
applying for UK citizenship or with other immigration problems. This facility
has not, however, been without problems[xvi].
I hope you can agree that the arrangements described in this
letter honour the obligations and commitments the UK Government has made in
respect of citizens’ rights, including safeguarding the employment status and
social entitlements of EU citizens resident in the UK.
The arrangements described in this
letter certainly do not honour the commitments
made by three key members of the UK Government: Boris Johnson, Michael Gove,
and Priti Patel. On paper, the
arrangements described in this letter do honour the obligations and commitments
the UK Government has made in respect of safeguarding the employment status of EU citizens, but, deprived of a physical
document with which to evidence their status, there are many reasons to think that,
in the real world, employers will discriminate
against EU citizens. The arrangements described in this letter do not honour the obligations and
commitments the UK Government has made in respect of the social entitlements of
EU citizens resident in the UK.
I trust you will be urging the EU27 to adopt similarly
generous approaches that will provide UK nationals in the EU27 with the
certainty and security that they need. It would be good to see the EU27
matching our offer of a fee free process and a deadline of at least 31 December
2020 for UK nationals to secure their status.
This is probably the most
disingenuous paragraph in the whole of Lewis’s letter. It is the UK that is stripping
its own citizens of their EU citizenship and thus their rights in the EU/EEA.
This means that, by default, UK citizens in the EU/EEA are left at the mercy of
whatever rules each member state has for third-country immigrants.
Imagine that (say) Australia
withdrew from the Commonwealth. Australian citizens living in the UK would,
thereby, lose certain rights here – such as the right to vote (a privilege
denied to EU citizens). Now imagine how the UK Government and our newspapers would
react if Australia began lecturing us about our treatment of their citizens. They
would say to Australia “this was your choice”; and that is what the EU and its
members will say to us.
Having said all that, the EU could require its members to grant
uniform privileges to UK citizens after Brexit, if all those members voted for
such arrangements, and the UK could have
tried to negotiate for this as part of the withdrawal agreement with the EU. The
EU was open to this and originally argued that all citizens (EU in UK and UK in EU) should retain all their existing rights. Unfortunately,
it was more important to the UK to deprive EU citizens in the UK of their
rights than it was to protect the rights of our citizens living in the EU. Given
the principle of reciprocity (which both sides agreed to) we are where we are,
and we simply have to hope that all the individual EU member countries will be more
generous towards our citizens than we have been towards our citizens who made
the grave mistake of exercising their freedom to live, work, study, and fall in
love in another part of our continent.
Minister of State for Security and Deputy for EU Exit and No
Deal Preparation
Addendum
Steve Peers (@StevePeers Professor of EU, Human Rights & World Trade Law, University of Essex) has just brought my attention to the fact that Lewis has also got the date wrong here. And, following from that error, he has got his facts wrong in another way too.
Assuming Brexit goes ahead with Johnson's "new" (Withdrawal Agreement (WA) - which is all but certain now - EU citizens in the UK and UK citizens in the EU will have until six months after the end of the "transition" period - i.e. until at least June 2021 to apply for settlement under the terms of the WA! In other words, Lewis's call for the EU to match our offer of a "deadline of at least 31 December 2020" is completely nonsensical.
Lewis is, however, correct (as I understand it) that some (or all?) EU countries have (modest) charges in place for UK citizens now forced to apply for residency in those countries as the UK originally insisted on for EU in UK. Again, the UK government could have easily tried to negotiate free schemes for all had it been so inclined at the time, but this would have meant the UK putting the plight of its own citizens above its desire (at that stage in the proceedings) to penalize EU citizens.
Steve Peers (@StevePeers Professor of EU, Human Rights & World Trade Law, University of Essex) has just brought my attention to the fact that Lewis has also got the date wrong here. And, following from that error, he has got his facts wrong in another way too.
Assuming Brexit goes ahead with Johnson's "new" (Withdrawal Agreement (WA) - which is all but certain now - EU citizens in the UK and UK citizens in the EU will have until six months after the end of the "transition" period - i.e. until at least June 2021 to apply for settlement under the terms of the WA! In other words, Lewis's call for the EU to match our offer of a "deadline of at least 31 December 2020" is completely nonsensical.
Lewis is, however, correct (as I understand it) that some (or all?) EU countries have (modest) charges in place for UK citizens now forced to apply for residency in those countries as the UK originally insisted on for EU in UK. Again, the UK government could have easily tried to negotiate free schemes for all had it been so inclined at the time, but this would have meant the UK putting the plight of its own citizens above its desire (at that stage in the proceedings) to penalize EU citizens.
[ix] This
is all a rather complicated area. The main loses of rights relate to absences
from the UK (for example to study, work, or care for a family member abroad); rights
to use a national identity card rather than a full passport; rights to family
reunion; reduction of the criminality threshold (so that what were hitherto
considered more minor offences may lead to deportation or refusal of status in
future); and loss of certain appeal/enforcement rights. See eg Citizens’ Rights - EU citizens in the UK andUK nationals in the EU (Policy Paper).
[x]
Again this a complex area (see eg How canEU nationals access UK benefits?).
Those granted “pre-settled” status would seem to be a in far more precarious
situation with respect to obtaining benefits than those granted full “settled”
status. It should be noted that, hitherto, the UK has been more generous to EU citizens
than a strict implementation of “EU law” would have required. The implication
of Lewis’s remarks would seem to be that this generosity will end. Lewis masks
this issue by his use of the phrase “the same access […] as they currently have
under EU law on free movement” which
sounds like “the same access […] as they currently have”, but isn’t the same.
[xiii]
See Has the Government learned from theWindrush scandal? In the Home Affairs Committee report for discussion of this issue.