Scottish Daily Mail

PM vows to fight EU over plans that may let 1m into UK

- From Jason Groves in Beijing and Mario Ledwith in Brussels

‘A matter for negotiatio­n’

THERESA May set out a new Brexit red line last night as she vowed to fight Brussels over plans that could grant a further one million EU citizens the right to settle in Britain.

EU leaders accepted in December that migrants arriving after Britain leaves the bloc at the end of March next year should lose the automatic right to reside here.

But Brussels backtracke­d on the deal this week, saying the ‘cut-off date’ should be delayed until the end of the transition period – putting it back by about two years.

The MigrationW­atch think tank warned the ‘absurd’ move could result in up to a million more EU migrants winning the automatic right to live in the UK.

Speaking to reporters on a trip to China, the Prime Minister vowed to fight the proposal during negotiatio­ns with the EU on the details of the transition period.

She also took a thinly veiled swipe at Philip Hammond’s vision of a status quo Brexit. The Chancellor enraged Euroscepti­c MPs when he suggested leaving the EU would result in only ‘very modest’ changes.

Mrs May contradict­ed him yesterday, saying people ‘did not vote for nothing to change when we come out of the EU’.

In an upbeat assessment, she said Britain’s economy would have a ‘better future’ outside the EU, but she could not accept the idea that EU migrants arriving after we have left should be granted the automatic right to stay here permanentl­y.

Mrs May said it was right to offer guarantees to the 3.2million EU citizens who had made their home here, because they had ‘made a life choice’ based on the UK’s EU membership. But she added: ‘For those who come after March 2019, that will be different.’

Guy Verhofstad­t, the European Parliament’s chief Brexit negotiator, has warned it would be an unacceptab­le curb to free movement if EU citizens arriving in Britain during the transition period were not granted automatic residency. But ministers insist free movement will technicall­y end in March 2019 anyway, when Britain leaves the EU.

In its place, Mrs May is proposing a temporary arrangemen­t where EU citizens will be free to come and live and work in the UK during the transition. The only restrictio­ns would be that they would have to register with the Home Office and – if she gets her way – they will not automatica­lly qualify to live in the UK permanentl­y.

Ministers are keen to secure agreement on a two-year transition by the end of next month in order to smooth Britain’s exit from the EU. But Mrs May insisted this did not mean they would just give in to EU demands.

‘This is a matter for negotiatio­n for the implementa­tion period,’ she said.

But Mr Verhofstad­t said: ‘Citizens’ rights during the transition is not negotiable. We will not accept that there are two set of rights for EU citizens.’

Last night, Mrs May faced fresh criticism from a member of her Brexit war cabinet, who anonymousl­y briefed The Spectator that the Government’s Brexit policy-making ‘looks worse from the inside than the outside’.

The group includes Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove.

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