EU Parliament threatens to veto UK's 'damp squib' offer to EU nationals
EU Parliament threatens to veto UK's 'damp
squib' offer to EU nationals
British Prime Minister
Theresa May has again come under fire, with the European Parliament warning it
may veto her proposals on EU nations living in the UK because they risk
creating a "second class of citizenship."
May has been criticized on a regular basis since making
public her plans to extend rights to the 3.2 million EU nationals living
in Britain after Brexit.
The proposals put forward by May were described as a "damp
squib" in a letter written by EU Parliament chief Brexit negotiator Guy
Verhofstadt and leaders of the parliament's four main parties, and published
Monday.
"The proposal falls short of its own ambitions to 'put
citizens first'. If implemented, it would cast a dark cloud of vagueness and
uncertainty over the lives of millions of Europeans," the letter read.
According to the British government's plans, a
new "settled status" would allow EU nationals who have lived in the
UK for five years to remain and enjoy access to health care, education and
other benefits.
EU nationals who have spent a shorter time in
the UK would be allowed to remain until they reach the five-year point, at
which stage they can apply for settled status. Others who arrive after an
as-yet-undisclosed cut-off date will benefit from a "grace period,"
expected to last two years.
May has promised families will not be split
up, but her government says that all EU citizens and their families must obtain
an immigration status irrespective of when they arrived in the country.
The proposal is dependent on British nationals
living in EU states being offered a reciprocal deal.
But Verhofstadt and his fellow European
politicians says the proposal falls short of the promises made by the Vote
Leave campaign, which said it would treat EU citizens "no less favorably
than at present" once Britain withdraws from the EU.
"The British government proposes that --
the day after Brexit -- Europeans obtain the status of 'third country
nationals'," the letter read.
"These nationals would get fewer rights
in the UK than British citizens are offered throughout the EU. Europeans will
not only lose their right to vote in local elections, their future family
members will also be subject to minimum income requirements, and it is unclear
what the status of 'post-Brexit' babies will be.
"The British proposal carries a real risk
of creating a second class of citizenship."
The European Parliament will have a vote on
the final Brexit deal, which will include the rights of EU nationals and
British citizens living in EU states.
While it does not engage in direct talks with
London, it will press Michel Barnier, the EU's chief Brexit negotiator, to
secure a better deal before Britain leaves the bloc in March 2019.
The letter also insists that the European
Court of Justice plays a full role in enforcing the rights of both British and
EU nationals -- a demand which the UK government will see as infringing upon a
red line. May has said the rights of EU citizens should be enforced by UK
courts.
"We will never endorse the retroactive removal of acquired
rights," the letter added.
"The European Parliament will reserve its right to reject
any agreement that treats EU citizens, regardless of their nationality, less
favorably than they are at present. For us, this is a question of basic
fundamental rights and values, which are at the heart of the European
project."
In response, Damian Green, Britain's first secretary of state,
insisted the "basic rights" of EU citizens will be protected by the
government's proposals.
Speaking to the BBC, Green said, "... somebody who is here
now will keep the rights that they already have and we hope and expect that
British citizens living in other EU countries will keep the rights that they
already have there."
He added: "If we're outside the European Union, then we clearly
have to have basic immigration rules to check that somebody coming is from the
country they say they are coming from and is a citizen of that country, all
that kind of thing.
"But that's not an insuperable barrier. We all fill in
forms when we go on holiday and have to get visas and things like that in other
parts of the world. But the basic rights will be preserved, so that should not
be an obstacle to a final deal."
FROM CNN

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