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EU Referendum Briefing 4: Immigration.

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EU Referendum Briefing 4: Immigration.


Steve Peers

Introduction

What impact does the UKs membership of the European Union (EU) have on immigration and asylum? This post examines that controversial issue, looking in turn at migration to the UK by non-EU and EU citizens.

Non-EU migration

Its central to distinguish between non-EU and EU migration in the referendum debate for two reasons. First of all, because while EU migration is obviously closely connected to the UKs membership of the EU, non-EU migration is not. Thats simply because the UK has negotiated and used opt outs from EU laws on non-EU migration and asylum, particularly from the EUs borderless Schengen zone. This means that the UK can control its borders with the rest of the EU as regards non-EU citizens, applying its own law to admit them or to refuse them entry. So its false to say that the UK has lost control of its borders as far as non-EU migration is concerned.

As I noted in the first EU Referendum Briefing, these opt-outs could only be removed by a Treaty amendment which the UK government and parliament agreed to. Moreover, the Schengen opt-out can only be removed by a public referendum.   

Secondly, the distinction is important because non-EU migration actually accounts for a greater share of net migration to the UK than EU migration does, as demonstrated here:


Moreover, for those who would like to see net migration to the UK reduced to the level of (say) 50,000 or below 100,000, it is self-evident from this graph that leaving the EU will not, by itself, accomplish this. Even with noEU migration, non-EU migration alone would still be well above the 100,000 level, as we can clearly see. Conversely, some would like to see more non-EU migrants admitted to the UK. Fine: the UK can admit them any time it likes. Its entirely the governments decision not to. But doing so would clearly move the UK further away from a target of 100,000 migrants, even if the UK leaves the EU.

A small minority of non-EU citizens in the UK are covered by EU law. First of all, non-EU family members of EU citizens are covered by EU free movement law. However, the UKs renegotiation deal (as discussed here) would allow it to restrict their numbers considerably, by tightening the rules on their entry.

Secondly, the UK opted into the first phase of EU asylum law, in 2003-05. At that time, though, it had a veto over asylum law proposals, and used it to insist that the EU rules would not change UK law. Although the Leave side claims that the EU court controls Britains asylum system, in fact the only British asylum cases which the EU court has decided concern the Dublin system of allocating responsibility for asylum applications between EU countries.

This system allows the UK to insist that other Member States take back asylum-seekers who have entered their territory before they got to the UK. If the UK left the EU, it would no longer be subject to these Dublin rules, unless the EU agreed to sign a treaty with the UK to that effect. This is pretty unlikely, since the EU has only signed such treaties with countries like Norway and Switzerland, for the sole reason that those countries also signed up to be part of the Schengen area at the same time.

Lets think about what all this means in practice. Some non-EU migrants who have travelled through the rest of the EU do attempt illegal entry into the UK, or would probably like to do so (those in Calais and Dunkirk, for instance). But why would that change if the UK left the EU? The people concerned wouldnt suddenly lose all desire to come to the UK. Their intended illegal entry would not become harder in any way. It would be against the law but it already is now. Brexit would not actually move the UK further away from the continent geographically. People do attempt illegal entry into non-EU countries, like the USA; and refugees flee to and stay in non-EU countries (like Turkey, Kenya or Lebanon) too.

Some on the Leave side have suggested that the UK is vulnerable to sexual assault from non-EU migrants on the continent. Lets unpack that. None of the non-EU migrants concerned have the right of entry into the UK. The UK can simply refuse them entry at the border. In contrast, the Orlando killer was a US citizen, who could have come to the UK without a visa, on the basis of the UKs visa waiver for US citizens.

Its sometimes suggested that non-EU migrants in the rest of the EU will all gain EU citizenship and come to the UK shortly afterward. But as shown in three separate analyses by Full Fact, BBC Reality Check, and Open Europe gaining EU citizenship is very difficult for non-EU citizens. It requires a long wait, a clean criminal record and satisfaction of many other criteria. If non-EU citizens dont have legal residence status, or their asylum application fails, they can be deported. Nearly 200,000 non-EU citizens are in fact expelledfrom the EU every year.  

Finally, lets apply this analysis to this poster produced by some on the Leave side, unveiled last week:



No one on the poster has any right to enter the UK. All of them can be refused at the border. Brexit would change nothing in this regard besides making it harder to remove to the EU those who do manage to enter illegally and apply for asylum. The prospect that many of them would gain EU citizenship and move to the UK is remote. 

So the poster is essentially unrelated to the referendum. As such, it is not an attempt at rational argument - but rather an appeal to irrational fear.

EU migration

In contrast, as noted already, the migration of EU citizens is indeed relevant to the referendum debate. Much of this debate is about the economic impact of EU migration, including its impact on public services. I ll leave that side of the debate to the economists. But there are some important legal issues that should be clarified, related to access to benefitsand exclusion on grounds of criminality. The key point is that the free movement of EU citizens, while generous compared to ordinary immigration laws, is not unlimited.

What are these limits? First of all, EU citizens have to meet the criteria to stay. The main legislation on the free movement of EU citizens known as the Citizens Directive provides that EU citizens and their family members can move to another member state initially for a period of three months. But it also says explicitly that the EU citizen has no right to any social assistance benefits during this time. Indeed, the UK has removedEU job-seekers access to job-seekers allowance during the first three months of their stay.

After three months, the Citizens Directive says that EU citizens and their family members can stay subject to further conditions: they are either workers or self-employed; or have sufficient resources not to burden the social assistance system, along with health insurance; or are students in a post-secondary institution, if they have health insurance and declare that they will not be a burden to the social assistance system. The EU court has confirmedthat there is no right to stay just to obtain social assistance without ever working in the host country. Recently it also confirmedthe UK governments refusal to pay child benefit or child tax credit to those who did not qualify to stay.

Its sometimes suggested that 500 million people can move to the UK under EU free movement law. Yes if there were 500 million jobs for them to come and do. Or 500 million university places available. Or if all of those 500 million people had a small fortune stashed away. Obviously nothing like those numbers of jobs, university places or self-sufficient people exist.

What about EU migrants who come to the UK and look for work? David Cameron has suggested they can be automatically removed after six months if they dont find work. This isnt correct: the Citizens Directive says that they can stay if they can provide evidence that they are continuing to seek employment and that they have a genuine chance of being engaged. But as mentioned already, they are not entitled to any benefits from the UK while looking for work. Also, they must meet the criteria of self-sufficiency, otherwise they would not be entitled to stay after three months anyway.

What if an EU migrant works in the UK for a time, then becomes unemployed? It is possible that they can retain status as a (former) worker, and therefore keep access to social assistance benefits. There are limits to this, however.  In particular, if the EU worker has been employed for less than one year in the UK, he or she would only retain worker status for six months after becoming unemployed. At that point the UK can cut off access to their benefits, as the CJEU has confirmed.

Workers are entitled to equal treatment as regards benefits, including top-up benefits paid to those in work, which are a large part of the UK tax and benefit system. However, the dealon the renegotiation of the UKs EU membership specifies that if the UK votes to stay in the EU, the current EU rules will be changed so that the UK can apply a four-year ban for workers from other EU member states on in-work benefits.

There renegotiation deal also says that the UK will be able to limit on the child benefit exported to EU workers with children in other member states, fixing the rate of that child benefit to the cost of living in the country of the childrens residence.

After five years legal stay on the basis of the Citizens Directive, EU citizens and their family members can obtain permanent residence status, meaning that they no longer have restricted access to social benefits.

As for criminality, it is sometimes suggested or inferred that the UK cannot refuse entry or expel EU migrants on criminal law grounds at all. This is clearly false. The Citizens Directive allows for expulsion, entry bans or refusal of entry for those who are a threat to public policy, public security or public health. There are limits, however. Restrictions must be proportionate and based exclusively on the personal conduct of the individual concerned. People cannot be excluded on general preventive grounds, but on personal conduct which must represent a genuine, present and sufficiently serious threat affecting one of the fundamental interests of society.

British authorities can check on an individuals police record after entry, and can also issue an entry ban preventing that person from coming to the UK in the first place. For those who are on the territory, there is greater protection against expulsion over time, but there is never any absolute ban on expulsion.

It has been suggested that the EU court has prevented 50 EU criminals from being removed from the UK. This is false. Any such judgments were made by UK courts or the European Court of Human Rights.

To prove that point, lets look at a listof allthe cases which the EU court decided on EU citizenship in the last five years. There are 53 cases, and only five of them concern expulsion or exit bans of EU citizens due to criminality. Of those five cases, just three concern the UK.  

In those five cases, the Court decided that: 

a) time spent in prison in the UK  by an EU citizens family member did not count toward getting permanent residence under EU law (Onuekwere); 

b) an EU citizen convicted of child cruelty could not count prison time toward a ten-year threshold giving extra protection against expulsion (G case);

c) the UK does not have to give an EU citizen information which could compromise national security during an expulsion proceeding (ZZ case);

d) people with a drug trafficking conviction can be banned from leaving the country (Gaydorov); and 

e) child abusers can be expelled on grounds of public security even if they have been resident for over ten years (I case).

So in every single relevant judgment in the last five years, the EU Court confirmed that Member States could limit the rights of convicted criminals or terrorist suspects.

The Leave side has referred to another supposed EU court ruling, about the daughter-in-law of a terrorist in the UK. In fact there is no ruling in that case yet only the non-binding opinionof an Advocate-General. And according to that opinion, the person concerned can indeed be expelled, if a British court believes that she is a risk to public security.

It is also possible to expel EU citizens on grounds that they rely on social assistance.

One final point about the free movement of EU citizens. The Leave side has referred several times to the possibility of Turkey joining the EU. Its sufficient to point out, as I discussed in a previous Referendum Briefing, that: a) every Member State has a veto on this; Turkey has agreed 1 out of 35 negotiating chapters, in 11 years of talks; and there would also be a lengthy period after Turkish accession before the free movement of persons applied.


Barnard & Peers: chapter 13

Credits - Meme: Pawel Swidlicki; Graph: The Independent; Photo: home.bt.com


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