Letter from British in Europe coalition seeks assurances over rights of Britons in mainland Europe and EU citizens in the UK

Campaigners for British nationals in Europe have written to Theresa May to plead with the prime minister not to throw them “under the Brexit bus” .

In a strongly worded letter, they wrote to the prime minister after her Florence speech to say they were not satisfied with what she had said and wanted a “lifetime” guarantee of their post-Brexit rights.

“If Michel Barnier, the European parliament and the EU27 member states see that the UK government is willing to throw us, our rights, our livelihoods and our children under the Brexit bus, they will have no confidence that it will recognise and protect the rights of the 3 million or any other post-Brexit obligations in the future,” said campaign group British in Europe, which represents 11 citizens groups across the EU.



They urge May to “stop treating citizens’ rights as a minor issue “that can be pushed aside in the headlong dash for a trade or indeed a security agreement” and plead with her to end the “platitudes” about their contribution to nationali life.



In reference to the UK’s offer, they also implore her to “please stop treating citizens’ rights as an immigration issue”.

With UK and EU negotiators due to start the fourth round of Brexit talks next week, the British in Europe lobby group says the uncertainty about their futures will hang over them like a cloud for life unless the prime minister delivers on her Florence speech promise that “you can carry on living your lives as before”.

“We don’t share the PM’s view that significant progress has been made on this most fundamental of issues and are thus astonished that our prime minister missed such an important opportunity to remedy this, not just for the 4.2 million citizens affected, but for the future of the UK-EU relationship post-Brexit ,” said Jane Golding, chair of British in Europe.

“We now appeal to her to listen to the voice of British citizens in the EU and all those EU citizens who make such a valuable contribution to the UK,” she said.

Golding, a lawyer in Berlin, said the offer of putting guarantees into the Withdrawal Agreement was a step in the right direction. But it would have to entail detailed law in order to mirror the “direct effect” European regulations currently have. Direct effect allows individuals to challenge national law if legislators have not implemented EU regulation properly.

The letter also asks May to scrap proposals to make all EU workers and their family members in the UK to apply for a new “settled status”, a proposed new immigration category.

EU citizens argue they settled in other countries in good faith under EU freedom of movement laws and that Britain should not renege on these in the case of the already settled populations just because of Brexit.

They want her to return to her Lancaster House promise to ensure the status quo for EU citizens in the UK in order to get a mirror deal for Britons in Europe.

“Her speech gives no clear comfort that she has listened to us and is moving in the right direction,” Golding said.

The group wants Britons who have settled in countries on the continent to continue to have freedom of movement, while EU citizens in the UK want the government to abandon its offer of “settled status”.

This is important, they say, because it will give them the lifelong right to return to the UK if they are forced into taking out foreign citizenship because of Brexit.

More immediately, it will allow them to continue to do cross-border business on the continent. Immigration barrister Jan Doerfel says May’s fresh remarks on EU citizens “fall far short” of the expectation of the EU.

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“Theresa May’s speech does not bridge the substantial gap between the EU and UK positions and does little to advance progress on the issue of EU citizens’ rights,” said Doerfel, who is concerned particularly in relation to the future of family reunion rights.

“While May has now agreed with the EU position that future case law of the court of justice of the European Union can be taken into account, she has not agreed to CJEU oversight.

“Her voiced commitments hence fall far short of the basic EU position as summarised by Michel Barnier in response to Ms May’s speech that ‘EU27 citizens in the UK must have the same rights as British citizens today in the EU’ and that these rights ‘must be implemented effectively and safeguarded in the same way in the UK as in the EU’,” he said.