Brexit
bill: MPs reject amendment to protect EU citizens in UK
Measure
to force government to give all EU citizens living in Britain
permanent residency defeated 332-290
Jessica Elgot
Thursday 9 February
2017 07.40 GMT
Attempts to force
the government to give all EU citizens in the UK permanent residency
after Britain leaves the bloc have been defeated.
The government
successfully blocked the bid to add the protections in amendments to
the Brexit bill in the House of Commons on Wednesday by 332 votes to
290. Three Tory MPs voted in favour of the amendment – Ken Clarke,
Andrew Tyrie and Tania Matthias.
However, the Liberal
Democrats said they were confident they have enough support from
Labour peers to pass the amendments when the bill is debated in the
House of Lords later this month.
“The Liberal
Democrats will make protecting these citizens’ rights a top
priority. We have tabled amendments in the Commons and we will do so
again in the House of Lords,” Lib Dem Lords leader Dick Newby said.
“We believe we have support on all sides to deliver on the promises
the government should have made to millions of people who have made
our country their home.”
Both parties are to
table amendments in the Lords concerning the rights of EU citizens,
though one Labour source said it would be “naive” to see any vote
as a done deal. It is understood peers are keen for the issue not to
be seen as party political, in case it deters sympathetic
Conservative or crossbench peers from supporting whichever amendment
is selected for a vote.
During the Commons
debate before the vote, the former culture minister Ed Vaizey said
Tory MPs had received reassurances from the home secretary, Amber
Rudd, on the status of EU citizens after departure from the EU. The
letter, published later by ConservativeHome, stresses “any hold-up
is less an issue of principle than one of timing with a few EU
countries insisting there can be ‘no negotiation before
notification’”.
In her letter, Rudd
says the status of EU citizens can only change after parliament has
approved a new immigration system. “The great repeal bill will not
change our immigration system,” she wrote. “This will be done
through a separate immigration bill and subsequent secondary
legislation so nothing will change for any EU citizen, whether
already resident in the UK or moving from the EU, without
parliament’s approval.”
Rudd says she
supports “securing the rights of EU citizens already here, as well
as establishing a new immigration system for new arrivals from the EU
once we have left”.
Vaizey, whose
Wantage and Didcot constituency is home to the Harwell Science and
Innovation Campus, said he had held a public meeting for 150 people,
many of them scientists and researchers from EU countries. “They
are devastated and they need reassurance from the government,” he
said. But, he said, he was “reassured by the home secretary’s
letter that was circulated earlier and the prime minister’s
repeated comments”.
The Labour MP Helen
Goodman and the SNP’s Alex Salmond asked Vaizey to publish the
letter or place it in the House of Commons library. The Tory MP then
admitted he may have made a “faux pas”.
He said: “It was
addressed ‘Dear colleague’ so it may just have been for me. It
may be private correspondence for me to circulate to my European
constituents who are among the most talented Europeans living in this
country. I’ve only been in the house for 11 years so I’m still
learning the ropes.”
A No 10 spokesman
said: “This was a ‘Dear colleague’ letter just repeating the
messages the prime minister has made about protecting the rights of
EU citizens in the UK and reciprocal arrangements. We are aware this
is an area of concern and the PM has been clear she wants to make it
one of the first priorities.”
Vaizey, who backed
remain in the referendum and jokingly described himself as a
“remoaner” said he thought the negotiations would be “a
difficult road that lies ahead but make no mistake the mood of the
house, particularly among many colleagues who supported Brexit is to
move as soon as possible to provide reassurance to EU citizens”.
Caroline Lucas, the
Green MP, who voted for the amendment, said: “The prime minister’s
refusal to guarantee that now, when she has the ability to do so is
cruel and, frankly, I think it is immoral as well. What we are
talking about are people’s lives. People’s lives are not to be
traded as part of some wider deal.”
Brexit minister
David Jones said the government had been as clear as it could about
the status of EU citizens. “The government fully recognises that
the issue of EU nationals resident in the UK is an extremely
important one and one we will be addressing as a priority just as we
wish to address the issue of the rights of EU nationals resident in
the EU,” he said. “This has to be a matter that is decided after
the negotiations commence.”
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