Sue Wilson Writes: How Spain treats Britons over Brexit is in the hands of the UK

Sue Wilson Writes: How Spain treats Britons over Brexit is in the hands of the UK

While there have been warm words and encouraging promises from Spain towards Britons in the country, the reality is their futures depend on the UK government and people have lost faith in it, says Sue Wilson from the Bremain in Spain campaign group.

How many times, over the last 31 months, have Brits living in the EU been told not to worry? As frequently, I imagine, as EU citizens in the UK have heard the same words.

Since the start of the negotiations in March 2017, our rights as citizens were one of three priorities up for negotiation. It was going to be easy, apparently, as nothing was going to change, and our lives would not be affected.

We might have believed it at the time, as the EU seemed keen to preserve the status quo. Brexit would not undermine our rights in any way, shape or form.

The initial offer from the EU provided reassurance. That is, until the Department for Exiting the European Union became involved. Prime Minister Theresa May rejected the EU’s initial offer and came back with her own inferior counter-offer. Not only that: May acted as if she were making the first offer!

It comes as no surprise, after viewing May’s time at the Home Office, that her driving ambition was to reduce immigration numbers. Having set an impossibly low target of tens of thousands of EU immigrants, May immediately starting taking rights and freedoms off the table for EU citizens. Naturally, the EU responded by removing rights from the table for British citizens in the EU.

Campaign groups, such as British in Europe, of which Bremain in Spain is a founding member, and the 3Million, have worked tirelessly to protect citizens’ rights. Despite their best efforts, the Withdrawal Agreement sees our rights downgraded and leaves important gaps, causing much anxiety. These include the loss of freedom of movement and the failure to recognise professional qualifications.

For many, the rights secured in the Withdrawal Agreement, such as healthcare and pensions, provided relief from the ongoing Brexit nightmare. However, that relief was always tempered with the constant ringing in our ears of May’s “nothing is agreed until everything is agreed”. Also, while May’s deal might have been agreed with the EU, there’s still no agreement with the UK parliament, or any sign of an agreement on the horizon.

Read the full article in The Local

Brexit: Why have British citizens in the EU been left to fight for their own rights?

Brexit: Why have British citizens in the EU been left to fight for their own rights?

Groups of volunteers are spending all their time and hard-earned cash on fighting for the rights of Britons across the EU who are directly affected by Brexit. The British government needs to finally make the 1.2 million citizens in the EU a real priority and ease the burden on campaigners, writes Ben McPartland.

Last week a team of volunteers in different parts of France worked late into the night trying to interpret the newly published French law that spells out what will happen in the case of a no-deal Brexit.

The volunteers, who form the “citizens rights” team at Remain in France Together (RIFT), put aside their normal lives and got on with the job of providing information to the thousands of anxious Brits who were waiting desperately for news of what their futures might hold if Britain crashes out of the EU in a few weeks’ time.

These are the same team of volunteers who have spent their own money travelling to Paris to lobby the French government to alert them to the issues Britons are facing across the country.

Of course, it’s not just in France where unpaid volunteers have taken it upon themselves to explain the impact of Brexit on health cover, driving licenses and residency rights and basically to stick up for the citizens’ rights of anxious Britons, whose lives and health have been damaged by nearly three years of limbo.

Read full story in The Local

‘Quizás no hayamos sido conscientes de todo lo que la Unión Europea podía ofrecer antes del referéndum’

‘Quizás no hayamos sido conscientes de todo lo que la Unión Europea podía ofrecer antes del referéndum’

Pregunta.- El ideario de Bremain in Spain se basa en una Europa con Reino Unido. ¿Por qué este hecho es tan importante?
Respuesta.- Para todos aquellos que han pasado años viviendo en España, siendo parte de Europa y sintiéndose europeos, es muy importante. Somos afortunados de tener la ventaja de las libertades y beneficios que nos ha ofrecido ser parte de la Unión Europea. Sería una pena que nuestros hijos y nietos no pudieran tener las mismas oportunidades que nosotros hemos podido disfrutar. Quizás no hayamos sido conscientes de todo lo que la UE tenía que ofrecer antes del referéndum: lo dimos por sentado. El referéndum lo ha cambiado todo, y ahora entendemos lo que tanto nosotros como Reino Unido podemos perder, pero seguiremos luchando para protegerlo.
 
P.-El 25% de los británicos que viven en España son personas mayores jubiladas. ¿Cómo puede incidir el brexit en su estadía?
R.- Actualmente, los mayores reciben atención médica gratuita y sus pensiones se actualizan cada año. El Gobierno británico ha prometido seguir protegiendo esos derechos, pero es una promesa en la que no tenemos mucha fe, especialmente cuando escuchamos muy a menudo la expresión “no se acuerda nada hasta que se acuerda todo”. Durante las negociaciones, ambas partes se han negado a “poner en valor” el acuerdo sobre los derechos existentes de los ciudadanos para protegernos del peor escenario.
 
Full article in entremayores
Bremain in Spain chair slams UK media for stereotyping Brit expats

Bremain in Spain chair slams UK media for stereotyping Brit expats

Whilst it’s a positive development that UK media outlets are now publicising the plight of British expats in Spain, it’s counterproductive in its use of hated stereotypes.

As the Brexit disaster rolls on, British newspapers are finally waking up to the unavoidable fact that hundreds of thousands of UK expatriates are about to be left with shattered dreams and not much else. However, the media’s use of tired old stereotypes is preventing the real message from getting through, causing even more pain, anger and desperation across Spain’s expat communities. A recent article by Sue Wilson, chair of Bremain in Spain, urges the media to tell it like it is rather than sensationally colouring the bleak picture simply to get more readers.

Ever since the referendum result was announced and its threat to Britons retiring in EU member states became clear, the UK government’s claim that its citizens’ rights would be protected as a priority hasn’t held up to even the most casual scrutiny. Citizens’ rights groups have tirelessly worked to support and protect expat interests, whilst British lawmakers are trying equally hard to deliberately limit protestors’ impact. As a result, British expats in Spain have come to the conclusion that their concerns are irrelevant at best and not worth noting at worst. At the same time, May’s policies towards EU expatriates in the UK have been conciliatory, making British citizens overseas feel they’re now totally disregarded.

Full story in Expats Blog

Los británicos ‘antiBrexit’ en España: ‘Es una locura absoluta y no puede pasar’

Los británicos ‘antiBrexit’ en España: ‘Es una locura absoluta y no puede pasar’

Recta final para el adiós del Reino Unido a la UE. O no. El grupo de británicos en España que apoyan la permanencia del país en la UE ‘Bremain in Spain’ remarca la “ansiedad” que padecen ante la idea de un Brexit sin acuerdo, una idea que se acentúa con el paso de los días. Pero unos la sufren más que otros: los pensionistas podrían tener que recurrir al pago completo de medicamentos o pólizas privadas: “No puedo ni imaginar la incertidumbre de no saber si vas a tener que dejar un tratamiento a la mitad”.