Scottish Daily Mail

UK’S 3M EU MIGRANTS CAN STAY SAYS MAY

PM guarantees rights of European citizens – but only if they arrived before Article 50

- From John Stevens and Mario Ledwith in Brussels

THERESA May last night told 3million EU nationals living in the UK they can stay for the rest of their lives.

The Prime Minister added that the residency ruling will mean

they will enjoy the same rights as British citizens.

Mrs May set out a ‘fair and serious offer’ which gives full access to schools, hospitals, pensions and benefits to all those who came to Britain before Article 50 was triggered in March.

But she warned that the ‘cut-off date’ for those residency rights might be earlier than the day in March 2019 when Britain formally leaves the eU.

Instead, it will be a matter for

negotiatio­n and depends on the EU being reasonable in the Brexit talks.

Mrs May also made clear the proposals would be adopted only if the same rights are guaranteed to UK citizens living in the other 27 EU states. And she wants Brussels to drop its demand that EU judges at the European Court of Justice oversee the deal.

Mrs May set out her offer at a dinner with EU leaders in Brussels, where she pledged to remain as Prime Minister to see the Brexit negotiatio­ns through.

She said she did not want to break up families or force any EU nationals currently living in the UK to leave. She told EU leaders: ‘The UK’s position represents a fair and serious offer – and one aimed at giving as much certainty as possible to citizens who have settled in the UK, building careers and lives, and contributi­ng so much to our society.’

The Prime Minister also guaranteed that no EU national living legally in Britain on the day the country quits the EU would be forced to leave immediatel­y – even if they arrived after the cut-off point for residency rights.

‘All EU citizens lawfully here at the

‘This is a fair and serious offer’

point the UK leaves will have the opportunit­y to regularise their status to remain in the country,’ she said.

The offer appears to be a generous bid to protect EU citizens in the UK, while retaining a powerful bargaining chip for the laborious negotiatio­ns ahead.

Under Mrs May’s plans, any EU nationals who arrived in Britain before she triggered Article 50 on March 29 will have the right to stay. Provided they have lived here for five years, they will be entitled to the rights of full British citizens for life.

Those who have been resident for a shorter period will be allowed to stay on until they have reached the five-year threshold. However, there will be a ‘cut-off date’ after which EU nationals who arrive in Britain will no longer automatica­lly get these residency rights.

The EU had wanted this to be the date at which the UK formally leaves in March 2019. However, the Prime Minister said last night this date would be up for negotiatio­n, and could fall at any point between the Article 50 date and the day the country leaves.

If the cut-off date falls before the date of Brexit, there will be a twoyear ‘grace period’ for people who arrive after the cut-off but before Britain leaves the EU. They will be able to use this period to regularise their immigratio­n status with a view to seeking full residency.

This grace period meant Mrs May was last night able to offer a commitment that ‘no EU citizen currently in the UK lawfully will be asked to leave the country at the point that the UK leaves’.

The introducti­on of a grace period raises the possibilit­y that large numbers of EU migrants arriving during withdrawal negotiatio­ns may be allowed to remain, at least for a few years.

Mrs May’s proposal leaves questions over whether individual­s with settled status will be permitted to bring in children or spouses, and whether the new status will be subject to conditions other than length of residency.

She also promised the immigratio­n system will be streamline­d, doing away with the 85-page permanent residency applicatio­n form which has been the subject of complaints from EU expats.

It is thought the UK is reserving the option of setting an early cut-off for residency rights in case there is a late surge of migrants arriving as Brexit approaches.

Mrs May said she wanted to provide certainty to those who had built careers and lives in the country as soon as possible.

But she warned the fate of those who have come since the cut-off date will depend on the EU being reasonable in negotiatio­ns.

Mrs May vowed to give reassuranc­e to EU nationals in the UK and to make them a priority in negotiatio­ns – in return for a reciprocal arrangemen­t for the 1 million Britons living in Europe.

The Prime Minister told EU leaders ‘the UK does not want anyone here to have to leave, nor does it want families to be split up’. But she added that they had to ditch their demand that rights of EU citizens to live in the UK would fall under the jurisdicti­on of the European Court of Justice (ECJ).

Mrs May said: ‘The commitment we make to EU citizens will be enshrined in UK law and will be enforced through our courts.’

A senior British official told the Mail: ‘We have been clear on the ECJ that we are taking back control of our own laws.’

A full paper detailing how Mrs May’s offer will apply to the spouses and children of EU citizens in the UK will be put before Parliament on Monday.

Despite claims of EU ‘unity’, one leader broke ranks and offered early backing to Mrs May, saying the UK has every right to enforce citizens’ rights in British courts.

Lithuanian president Dalia Grybauskai­te said: ‘It’s the right of Britain to decide how much they will be involved and use the European judiciary.’

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said EU citizens should be ‘offered the most far-reaching guarantees’.

At the summit, leaders also claimed to have taken a ‘historic step’ towards creating a Brusselsle­d defence union. In a significan­t shift towards what critics call an ‘EU army’, leaders said they had taken a step towards ‘deeper integratio­n in defence’.

Member states, including the UK, have been told to submit plans within three months showing how they would react to ‘the most demanding missions’.

European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker likened Europe’s defence to a princess that ‘is now awakening’.

‘Far-reaching guarantees’

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