The problem is not which Roger is the citizen of any EU member nation or British. Therefore, the answer to my question is simply to assume that he is a British citizen. I assume that he is considered a British citizen, but whatever method is adopted, the laws and regulations applicable to the EU are the same in all EU Member States. The problem includes the status and rights of immigrant EU countries in the host country. It deals with the status of workers and families under EU law, the application of discrimination principle and equal treatment.
We currently have two immigration problems. EU immigrants and non - EU immigrants. Vacation moves insist that we can cope with half of the problem by leaving the EU, EU immigration problem. However, all these EU immigrants will only become non-EU immigrants, and for many decades the government has not been able to effectively control non-EU immigrants, so Brexit is not immigrants It does not affect. I may wish to point out that EU immigrants are coming from 27 countries, not immigrants from all over the world. Therefore, the EU immigration issue is even more serious. This is a lie, it is simple and straightforward. People do not move from all countries of the world to the UK - most non-EU immigrants come from countries that are doing similar wars such as Somalia, Syria, Eritrea. In other words, even if you correct immigrants other than the EU, the number of countries that actually immigrated will not be close to 27 people.
Impact of EU immigration policy During the past decades, the European Union (EU) has gradually developed immigration policies. In 1957, the then European economic community was established and the citizens of the member countries gained the right to exercise freely throughout the community. In 1985, the governments of Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands agreed to gradually abolish border control between them in the "Schengen Convention". As a result of the signing of the Amsterdam Treaty in 1997, the Schengen Agreement is incorporated into the EU Law, and as of July 2014, the San Benjamin Region has 22 EU Member States 2 and 4 non-EU countries (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland ). This free movement of EU citizens brought EU support to immigration policies of non-EU citizens. The European Commission contacted