Some EU citizens may be forced to leave Britain
MOST European Union citizens will be able to stay in Britain when it leaves the bloc, although some might have to leave, the UK minister in charge of negotiating the divorce said yesterday.
David Davis dismissed suggestions that the estimated 3 million EU nationals now living in Britain might be forced to leave, telling Sky News: “I want to see a generous settlement for the people here already. They didn’t seek this circumstance — we did.”
But he said if a surge of new immigrants trying to “beat the deadline” floods into Britain before it leaves the EU, the Conservative government may have to set a cutoff date.
“We may have to say that the right to indefinite leave to remain protection only applies before a certain date,” Davis said in an interview with the Mail on Sunday newspaper. “You have to make those judgments on reality, not speculation.”
A desire to reduce immigration from other EU nations was a key reason many Britons voted last month to leave the EU. Under the bloc’s rules, EU nationals can move freely among member states, and Britain has seen its population swell by hundreds of thousands of new arrivals in recent years.
Prime Minister Theresa May has been criticized for refusing to guarantee the right of EU citizens to remain in the UK after its EU exit — something that is more than two years away. She says she needs to ensure that hundreds of thousands of Britons living in other EU countries get the same protection.
Britain’s vote to leave the EU has unleashed political and economic turmoil, as people and markets absorb the uncertainties about the country’s economic future as it leaves the 28-nation single market.
Davis said he believes Britain will be able to retain access to the single market while opting out of the EU’s right to free movement. EU leaders say that’s impossible because free movement is a key EU principle.
David said: “Of course they are talking tough. If I was negotiating to buy your house or your car my first offer wouldn’t be my final one, would it?”
The referendum has also put the future of the UK itself in question, with the pro-independence Scottish administration suggesting it could seek a new independence referendum if Britain takes Scotland out of the EU against its will. Scottish voters strongly backed remaining in the EU in the June 23 referendum.
The government is seeking to stress the UK can build strong trade ties outside the EU. May said she had spoken to Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who expressed a desire for a free trade deal with Britain.
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