More than 6M EU citizens apply to stay in UK after Brexit

Over 400,000 applications were made in the final month before the settlement scheme ended on June 30, the Home Office said, adding that those who had missed the deadline on "reasonable grounds" could still make a late application.

Steve Bray and another anti-Brexit protester, demonstrate outside Portcullis House, in Westminster, central London, Britain, on May 26, 2021.
Reuters

Steve Bray and another anti-Brexit protester, demonstrate outside Portcullis House, in Westminster, central London, Britain, on May 26, 2021.

More than six million EU citizens have applied to stay in the UK after Brexit, the government said on Friday, nearly twice the number thought to be living in Britain before it left the bloc.

There was a late flurry of applications ahead of a June 30 deadline for the settlement scheme, designed to allow EU citizens residing in the UK to retain the same rights as they enjoyed before Brexit.

But since the end of the Brexit transition period on January 1, EU citizens wishing to settle or stay have faced tougher tests to secure residency and employment.

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Late applications still possible

The final figure of 6.02 million applications, with 5.1 million grants of status, is far higher than the 3.7 million EU nationals originally estimated to be in the country when the scheme launched in March 2019.

More than 400,000 applications were made in the final month before the scheme ended, the Home Office said, adding that those who had missed the deadline on "reasonable grounds" could still make a late application.

"When we left the EU we promised to protect the rights of EU citizens who have made their life in the UK, and developed the hugely successful EU Settlement Scheme to ensure they could call the UK home in the years to come," Home Secretary Priti Patel said.

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Successful delivery of promise?

The government has touted the settlement scheme as the successful delivery of promises made to EU nationals in the UK after Britain's withdrawal from the bloc in December and the end of free movement.

However, immigration rights campaigners have complained that the most vulnerable – including children placed in care, young adults previously in care, the homeless and the elderly – have been allowed to slip through the scheme's net.

Minister for Future Borders and Immigration Kevin Foster said the government had built "safeguards" into the scheme "to protect those who have not yet applied, but who may still be eligible" and "everybody will be able to get the status they deserve".

The Home Office said the approximately 570,000 applicants still awaiting approval will have their status protected while a decision is made.

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