HomeThemesTypesDBAbout
Showing: ◈ EU nationals×
The British government on Friday was criticized for poor taste and bad timing after posting a video informing European Union citizens of the steps they will need to take if they want to “continue living” in Britain after the country leaves the EU.
Ashley Fox says organisation will not hesitate to take public bodies to court if they breach Brexit withdrawal agreement.
EU citizens held up in airports and facing delays in moving house because they can’t provide physical proof of UK residency – despite government’s own assessment warning digital-only status would cause ‘a lot of issues’.
EU citizens rights campaigners The3Million have said that “numerous” EU nationals are being refused Universal Credit because of their settlement status.
Domestic abuse victims and children in care among those affected by ‘last minute’ announcment of crucial funding, campaigners say.
Kevin Foster made the remarks a week before the deadline for the EU settlement scheme.
A significant number of EU citizens believe Brexit has made Britain "unrecognisable", a new study found.
“Everyone in our society should have a safe place to live and no one should be punished for experiencing homelessness."
Mayor vows to make capital a better place to live to offset ‘shockwaves’ from EU departure.
Spain hosts the largest contingent of Britons on the continent, and their rights are protected by royal decree, but many fear what comes if the UK doesn’t uphold its side of the deal.
“Are they going to break our family apart?"
The Home Office says the EU settlement scheme is working. Working for whom, exactly?
Once you do it Brexit will become real, but until then you can just stay in denial, journalist Marie Le Conte writes.
From fish to border checks and even sausages in Northern Ireland, a host of issues need to be resolved in 2021.
It might have had five years to sink in, but for those with deep roots on the continent, the pain of Brexit still feels raw – particularly at this time of year.
Home Office figures caused speculation that number of Europeans in UK had been underestimated.
During the referendum, Leavers loudly defended the rights of EU citizens legally resident in the UK. Now many pro-Brexit MPs are not practising what they preach. They have so far refused to back legislation requiring the government to guarantee these citizens’ rights. We’ve gathered below some of the statements made before and after June 23 by Boris Johnson, Michael Gove and ...
Ask your MP to read the report and back our calls to #LiftTheDeadline.
Crashing out of the EU would affect UK politics, the economy, security and millions of British and European migrants.
'What really got my alarm bells ringing is this sentence under the privacy policy heading: "We may also share your information with other public and private sector organisations in the UK and overseas."'
Liverpool Law School‘s Dr Stephanie Reynolds explains the legal minefield in store for UK and EU negotiators as they seek to resolve one of the major outstanding issues to be considered following the activation of Article 50.
If not, and the vote is to exit, it will be no good saying afterwards that “we didn’t understand what we were voting for” – the repeated complaint made by eurosceptics about the 1975 Referendum. By then it will be too late.
Free movement, housing and social security rights at risk, says parliamentary report.
THE Home Office has launched a new information campaign urging EU citizens living in the UK to apply for its settlement scheme as soon as possible.