Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

05 May 2017

Bloomberg: Barnier sets stage for thorny Brexit talks on citizens' rights


Default: Change to:


The European Union’s chief Brexit negotiator set the stage for months of difficult talks, laying out a long list of demands for EU residents in the UK and addressing topics that Prime Minister Theresa May had previously marked as red lines.


Michel Barnier, speaking at a conference in Florence, Italy, on Friday, said that residency protection rights for EU citizens living and working in the U.K. must be enforceable by the European Court of Justice, extend to relatives who may not be EU citizens and apply to people who may not have the paperwork to prove they have been residents.

“No one should be confronted with a mountain of red tape,” Barnier said, two days after the European Commission circulated a draft of negotiating directives he will follow in Brexit talks that are expected to begin in June. “In the U.K., the rights in the withdrawal agreement will need to be directly enforceable and the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice maintained.”

Reaching a deal on the rights of citizens is a key condition set by the EU for agreeing to discuss the framework for a future trade relationship with Britain. Limiting the free movement of people across the bloc was one of the main demands of Brexit campaigners in the U.K., thus restricting the room for the government to offer concessions.

The cut-off date for the people who will continue to enjoy residency privileges is the day the U.K. leaves the EU, but protection should apply for the lifetime of the citizens, according to Barnier. In addition to the some 3.2 million European citizens in the U.K., privileges must also apply to frontier workers who commute to Britain, people who have worked or lived in the U.K. in the past and family members, including relatives who are not EU citizens, he said.

May, who leads by a wide margin in polls ahead of next month’s general election, had resisted granting rights to non-EU spouses while she was home secretary. As prime minister, she has also drawn a red line over the European Court of Justice maintaining jurisdiction over the U.K. post-Brexit.

Iron-Clad Guarantees

Barnier on the other hand reiterated that the 27 remaining EU countries require “iron-clad guarantees” of citizens’ rights before the negotiations on Britain leaving the bloc can move to a future trade accord. “Otherwise, there can be no trust when it comes to constructing a new relationship with the U.K.” [...]

Full article on Bloomberg

Speech by Michel Barnier at the 7th State of the Union Conference

Related speech in French: ''Avec une vue sur l'extérieur'' – Discours du Président Juncker auprès du European University Institute à l'occasion de la State of the Union conference: Building a people's Europe



© Bloomberg


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment