Zero chance EU citizens in UK will keep same rights post-Brexit, says expert
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Leading barrister tells Lords panel that UK may have to consider compensation for Britons abroad if they lose some rights.
An EU flag in Westminster.
Photograph: Daniel Leal-Olivas/PA
The chances of EU citizens settled in Britain retaining all their
rights to live, work and retire in the UK after Brexit have been rated
as zero by legal experts.
A leading barrister who specialises in international public law told a House of Lords panel on Tuesday it was “inconceivable” that the laws would survive entirely intact.
Prof Alan Vaughan Lowe QC said this was the price millions of people –
including 1.3 million Britons abroad and 3 million non-Britons living
in the UK – were likely to pay for Brexit.
Such was the uncertainty surrounding negotiations and the demands of
other EU states, he said, that the British government might have to
consider compensation for British citizens abroad if some rights, such
as access to Spanish or French healthcare, were lost.
But Lowe told the Lords justice subcommittee that what worried him
most was the lack of knowledge about the issue at government level.
“There is very little evidence of people knowing what they are trying to
do,” he said.
Legal entitlements such as the right to work, reside, retire, vote in
local elections and have access to welfare and health systems come
automatically from Britain’s membership of the EU.
Only a limited number of rights, namely the right to own property and contractual rights, would be protected by international law, the peers were told.
Lowe said not only was there no clear objective on an individual’s
legal rights post-Brexit in Britain or in Spain, France or any other EU
state, it was not clear whom the government wanted to protect.
“If it’s been drafted with future citizens in mind, you would take a
different view of rights that would naturally fade out with mortality,”
he said.
The chair of the committee, Helena Kennedy, said the complexity of
the so-called acquired rights was a concern to millions who wanted to
plan their futures. Could any reassurances be given?
“Absolutely no,” Lowe replied. “I think there is zero chance [that
the] … existing legal system affecting European nationals in this
country will not change.”
Lady Kennedy said she was mindful of the number of lobbyists now
attaching themselves to governments who would end up as negotiators.
Lowe suggested that in the absence of any evident expertise on the
topic, the government could look at “decolonisation provisions” used in
the 1950s and 1960s to protect the rights of British nationals in
Rhodesia and Burma.
Sionaidh Douglas-Scott, a professor of law at Queen Mary University
of London, pointed out there was no transparency in the Brexit
negotiations, so it was difficult to assess what interests the
government would seek to protect.
She said the Greenland treaty, which governed that country’s exit
from the EU following a referendum in 1982, could be a starting point.
On the plus side, the Lords were told, the Greenland model was vague
enough to allow Britain to attend to the legal detail over a period of
10 years after Brexit. On the minus side, it was mainly concerned with
the protection of fisheries.
Kennedy said it was not clear with what “vehemence” the government
would seek to safeguard some rights, and which ones would be “negotiated
away”. She also questioned the seriousness with which the issue was
being taken. “So it is worrying,” she said.
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Safeguarding
all EU rights might not be the best strategy, said Lowe. It might be
that the government would have to step in to offer protection for
Britons abroad.
“If [they] lose rights to access to a free health system, then maybe
that is something the British government should pick up,” he said. “I
can’t see any practical possibility whatsoever of getting a withdrawal
agreement that ties up all the legal issues.”
Douglas-Scott said it was not clear who would be leading the
negotiations on acquired EU rights – whether it was a government
minister or a collective body that would include experts and opposition
politicians.
Both Douglas-Scott and Lowe stressed that EU rights would fall away unless specifically protected under new British law.
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