Europaudvalget 2018-19 (1. samling)
EUU Alm.del Bilag 219
Offentligt
No Deal Brexit preparedness – why the Commission’s proposal does not work
The European Commission, which has refused for over a year to discuss what happens to
citizens’ rights if there is no EU/UK Withdrawal Agreement, has finally come up with a
suggested solution. As a great poet of the original European Union
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said 2000 years ago,
“The mountains give birth and a ridiculous little mouse is born.”
The ridiculous little mouse with which the Commission would like to replace all the EU rights
of UK citizens living in the EU27 in the No-Deal scenario is “third country national” (TCN)
status. In its Contingency Action Plan Communication (the “Communication”) issued on 13
November
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, the Commission proposed that, in order to prepare for a No-Deal Brexit, the
EU27 countries should start accepting early applications by UK citizens for TCN status.
As British in Europe has argued since as early as August 2017, if all we are left with is TCN
status, most of us will be illegal immigrants (and thus wholly without rights) on 30 March
next year. Thus, with this Communication, the Commission falls very far short of the
standard it set itself, namely that “it
has always been the European Union’s intention that
citizens should not pay the price of Brexit”.
We therefore presume that this Communication
is simply the first step in an ongoing process of preparedness in case of a No Deal and that,
in the event that No Deal were to become a reality, the Commission is planning more
detailed measures to ensure that our status is secured.
Much more robust action is required to see that we do not pay the price of Brexit. The
simplest and safest solution is to ring-fence the citizens’ rights agreement already reached.
In the absence of that, only legislative action in the EU27 Member States will work.
Why will we be stripped of our rights on 30 March?
There are four reasons why TCN status does not fill the gaping hole left by the removal of
our rights as EU citizens:
I. The first is that – unlike EU citizenship – no form of TCN status is automatic. It is
necessary to submit an application in each and every case, and the approval process
takes time.
II. The second is that, in order to have TCN rights at all, a person has to be “legally
resident” in the State in question. This is, therefore, a chicken-and-egg situation,
because our problem is that unless there is some additional intervention we will not
be “legally resident” on 30 March.
III. The third is that a very large number of UK citizens
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currently residing legally in the
EU27 countries will – as things stand – not satisfy the conditions required for any of
the various EU schemes for TCNs.
IV.
The fourth is that the rights conferred on those who succeed in an application under
one of these schemes still fall well short of the rights which they currently have as EU
citizens.
These four reasons are dealt with in greater detail below.
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The Roman, Horace
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https://ec.europa.eu/info/sites/info/files/brexit_files/info_site/communication-preparing-
withdrawal-brexit-preparedness-13-11-2018.pdf
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Estimated informally as about a third in a country such as France.
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