Home Office to allow EU citizens who missed residency deadline to stay in UK

home office to allow eu citizens who missed residency deadline to stay in uk

Photograph: Tolga Akmen/AFP/Getty Images

The Home Office has made a significant U-turn on the rights of EU citizens who were in the UK before Brexit, allowing those who missed the deadline to apply for post-Brexit permanent residency cards to remain in the country.

However, campaigners say the decision must be backed by more explicit wording in guidance to case workers – or EU citizens will end up having to “beg” for their rights to be recognised.

The change follows a series of stories of EU citizens facing devastating consequences, highlighted by the Guardian.

EU citizens living in the UK and Britons living in the EU before Brexit have the lifelong right to remain in the country they were living in under the Brexit withdrawal agreement.

The government launched the EU settlement scheme to document the near 6 million EU citizens in the country. The scheme closed in June 2021, but late applications were considered on “reasonable grounds”.

Problems arose last August in a Home Office crackdown. New rules removed “lack of awareness” of the settlement scheme as a reasonable ground for a late application.

The decision caused significant difficulties for EU citizens, including one Italian restaurateur who had been paying tax in the UK for 21 years but overnight found his bank account frozen by Santander, forcing him to close his business as he could not pay staff or suppliers.

“I’ve done nothing wrong and they just say one day ‘bye, bye’, no explanation, nothing. It’s been horrible,” Massimo told the Guardian.

Campaigners estimate that potentially tens of thousands of EU citizens applied for permanent residency cards after 2016.

Silvana, an Italian tech investor, discovered her permanent residency card was useless when she went to renew the European health insurance card for her daughter before a holiday, only to be told her permanent residency card meant nothing.

Under the Home Office’s August rules, she could have faced removal from the country because a lack of awareness of the EU settlement scheme was no longer a reasonable ground for a late application.

After succumbing to pressure from campaigners and EU citizens, the Home Office has published new guidance to case workers, telling them late applications from those with permanent residency cards “are reasonable grounds” for delays in application to the scheme.

Silvana said: “I’m very happy that they are changing the guidelines and that they essentially realising it was a mistake to do this to good citizens who have been here a long time and are contributing to society.”

However, the campaign group the3million described the change as a partial victory, as the updated guidance is not as explicit as it could be.

Instead of stating that late applications from EU citizens with permanent residency cards are allowable, the Home Office gives a convoluted example of someone in such a situation.

“We’re disappointed that the Home Office still does not accept that having an EEA permanent residence card in itself is sufficient evidence for reasonable grounds for applying late, and it also expects people to beg, bend their knee and show remorse for not knowing,” said the interim co-chief executive of the3million Andreea Dumitrache.

“Politicians promised EU citizens would retain their rights after Brexit. This government needs to take responsibility for changes brought in and change this culture of disbelief in the Home Office.”

A Home Office spokesperson said: “More than two years have passed since the main deadline for applying to the EU settlement scheme, which was widely publicised. In line with the citizens’ rights agreements, we continue to accept and consider late applications from those with reasonable grounds for their delay in applying.”

Separately, concerns about the Home Office have been raised in relation to its response to a high court ruling on the EU settlement scheme.

The high court had sided with the statutory body set up to protect EU citizens’ rights, the Independent Monitoring Authority, which claimed it was wrong to remove the employment, residency and healthcare rights of those with pre-settled status (for those in the UK for less than five years before Brexit) if they had forgotten to apply to upgrade to settled status once they were eligible.

In response, the Home Office has given a two-year extension to those with pre-settled status in the belief this would cover any gap for those who forgot to reapply.

Campaigners say this means employers and landlords or banks could interpret this extension as a legally risky temporary status and remove an individual’s rights.

“While the Home Office has been effective in many cases, some citizens face uncertainty, impacting their ability to live, work and raise families in the UK,” said Miranda Biddle, the chief executive of the Independent Monitoring Authority.

OTHER NEWS

19 minutes ago

Darren Dornan is Northern Ireland amateur snooker champion

19 minutes ago

Emotional Jurgen Klopp names favourite final ahead of Liverpool departure

21 minutes ago

Gunfire heard in Congo’s capital as men in military uniform clash with a politician’s guards near the president's office

22 minutes ago

Alana Hadid’s Watermelon Pictures Takes North America For Gaza Director Mohamed Jabaly’s Doc ‘Life Is Beautiful’

23 minutes ago

Usyk beats Fury to become first undisputed heavyweight boxing champion in 24 years

26 minutes ago

WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange faces US extradition judgment day

27 minutes ago

Blow for Clement: Excellent Rangers hero considering move to England

27 minutes ago

Arsenal XI vs Everton: Confirmed team news, predicted lineup and injuries today

27 minutes ago

6 dead, 10 hurt as wrong-way pickup hits van packed with passengers in Idaho

28 minutes ago

Eight premium cars including Audi and BMW with common reliability issues, according to Which?

28 minutes ago

How to invest in the Ozempic weight loss boom and pile on the financial pounds: Share prices have already risen six-fold, but beware those celebrity endorsements…

28 minutes ago

Ineos Quartermaster review: There's a new premium pick-up truck in town - but you'll need deep pockets

28 minutes ago

Ollie Wines is taken out of Port Adelaide game after suffering heart scare during Power's clash with Hawthorn

28 minutes ago

Tony Abbott's daughter Frances welcomes second child with husband Sam on a YOGA MAT and reveals her adorable name

28 minutes ago

Giovanni Pernice's Strictly co-stars distance themselves from dancer as he vows to 'clear his name' amid BBC misconduct probe and instead show their support for Amanda Abbington's Instagram posts

29 minutes ago

KIB forges partnership with ECO, Kuwait’s first business incubator in environmental innovation and renewable energy

29 minutes ago

WA has no hope of achieving net zero emissions targets by 2050 without radical change, secret government report finds

29 minutes ago

Is it really that risky? People often lie to their GPS about drinking over 14 units of alcohol a week

30 minutes ago

Kaizer Chiefs coach talks SASSA and potholes

30 minutes ago

DWP Universal Credit warning ahead of benefit payment change next week - are you affected?

30 minutes ago

Soccer-Chelsea players must set ego aside for success next season, says Silva

31 minutes ago

Amazon reduce price of Allevia Allergy Tablets - which are hailed by shoppers for working

31 minutes ago

Jurgen Klopp breaks silence on Arne Slot and new Liverpool arrivals - "I liked the signings"

31 minutes ago

Arsenal and Man Utd legend secures first managerial job

36 minutes ago

Revealed: The seven pensions savings habits that could add £35,000 to your retirement income… every year

36 minutes ago

Owen Farrell denied final home farewell as Sale outplay Saracens to make play-offs

36 minutes ago

Man Utd news: Jadon Sancho set for awkward Erik ten Hag reunion as United boss offered advice

36 minutes ago

Woman uses artificial intelligence to speak after brain surgery damaged voice

36 minutes ago

Tiger Woods weighs up importance of LIV Golf talks compared to his own PGA Tour success

36 minutes ago

Disputed penalty in final minutes gives Whitecaps a 1-1 draw against Sounders

37 minutes ago

Top-ranked Nelly Korda takes LPGA lead at Liberty National

37 minutes ago

Europe’s ageing population is a money magnet for some investors

37 minutes ago

Musk arrives in Bali for planned Starlink launch

37 minutes ago

Mounting tourism costs prompt Japan hot spring town Hakone to consider introducing lodging tax

37 minutes ago

'Strong Squad, All Bases Covered': Shikhar Dhawan's Thoughts on India's T20 World Cup 2024 Squad

37 minutes ago

Chelsea's staggering salaries where Malang Saar earns more than Cole Palmer and Thiago Silva

37 minutes ago

Pumpkin Cake

38 minutes ago

Devon water crisis – live: Council leader suggests residents ‘stop paying bills’ as parasite infections rise

41 minutes ago

Here’s where I see the Legal & General share price ending 2024

42 minutes ago

My husband finds life easy, and ‘corrects’ me because I don’t

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch