A Million People Apply to Become Irish: Can Brits Escape Brexit? - Brexit Explained

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024

Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @TLDRnews
    @TLDRnews  4 года назад +241

    PLEASE NOTE:
    TLDR is an independent unbias news channel. In this video we discuss how thousands of people are changing their citizenship to avoid the impacts of Brexit.
    By discussing this topic we’re not making any comment on the merits of Brexit.
    While Brexit is a huge issue it can have fundamental impacts on peoples lives, which can lead to them wanting to protect their rights as EU citizens.
    By recognising this, and discussing how you could do it, we’re not saying that Brexit is a bad thing or should be avoided.
    Also, as should be obvious, none of the information about citizenship applications should be taken as legal advice.

    • @herrlades1753
      @herrlades1753 4 года назад +47

      "TLDR is an independent unbias news channel." - Sounds like pro EU Propaganda to me! :p

    • @iamokayiswear
      @iamokayiswear 4 года назад +19

      @@herrlades1753 *cringe*

    • @Me1le
      @Me1le 4 года назад +33

      I accept you are independent. But how would you know you are unbiased.
      Even the most biased people think they are unbiased and surely we are all influenced by thousands of cultural and environmental factors.
      Good video though.

    • @Rolando_Cueva
      @Rolando_Cueva 4 года назад +26

      *unbiased

    • @Oversensitive-S-poster
      @Oversensitive-S-poster 4 года назад +7

      @@Me1le its just PR/damage control

  • @marti2474
    @marti2474 4 года назад +452

    Germany allowing citizenship to people with German heritage. Royal family sorted.

    • @hebrewwolf6540
      @hebrewwolf6540 4 года назад +7

      you saying royal family is in the pocket of germans? ouch

    • @Carolus_Tsang
      @Carolus_Tsang 4 года назад +30

      Good. Send those Saxe-Coburg-Gotha descendants back to Saxony, and restore the Stuarts to the British throne! Tandem Triumphans!

    • @95winston
      @95winston 4 года назад +12

      ​@@Carolus_TsangKing George V by royal proclamation on 17 July 1917, when he changed the name of the British Royal Family from the German Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to the English Windsor, due to the anti-German sentiment in the British Empire during World War I.

    • @MrRawMonkey
      @MrRawMonkey 4 года назад +1

      Marti Not only the Royal Family but every economic migrant in the world that step foot in the country.

    • @Dabhach1
      @Dabhach1 4 года назад +7

      @@95winston In response to which, the Kaiser announced he was off to see a performance of The Merry Wives of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.

  • @freebornjohn6876
    @freebornjohn6876 4 года назад +86

    I'm British and used to live in Ireland. If I could have forseen Brexit I would definitely applied to become an Irish citizen whilst living there. My son who was born there fortunately qualifies for an Irish passport.

    • @Leodiazz
      @Leodiazz Год назад +1

      Zambrano ruling would apply in your case I think. Check that out

    • @Martini923
      @Martini923 Год назад +2

      Nope new rules in Ireland one or either parents has to be Irish for their to claim citizenship’s, unless you have Irish grandparents etc

    • @theninjalion2811
      @theninjalion2811 Год назад +1

      I presume he was born before 2005

    • @Martini923
      @Martini923 Год назад +1

      Being in born in Ireland doesn’t automatically grant your son citizenship, under new citizenship laws one or either parents has to be Irish for the child to get citizenship. You are automatically an Irish citizen if one of your parents was an Irish citizen who was born in Ireland.

    • @Martini923
      @Martini923 Год назад

      If your wife is Irish when your son was born he Irish, if you or your wife are British, your son isn’t automatically Irish, new Irish citizen laws citizenship law was change on 1 January 20O5

  • @deannilvalli6579
    @deannilvalli6579 4 года назад +367

    I really do wish the British would stop calling themselves expats and everyone else immigrants. I mean, how hard it it NOT to do that?

    • @alicianieto2822
      @alicianieto2822 4 года назад +46

      That´s why Spain makes them learn Spanish I guess, because the word "expat" does not exist in Spanish.
      PD:Expatrida/expatriado exists, but means something closer to refugee.

    • @Mira_linn
      @Mira_linn 4 года назад +15

      @@alicianieto2822 how fitting :D

    • @mishapurser7542
      @mishapurser7542 4 года назад +16

      I agree. I always say I want to immigrate to another country. And that I will be an immigrant once I get there.

    • @rtsharlotte
      @rtsharlotte 4 года назад +4

      I call myself an economical migrant. An immigrant is someone who has their adoptive countries citizenship and intends to stay there that could be why we say expat

    • @prophetsnake
      @prophetsnake 4 года назад

      Impossible, I would think.

  • @TheLastAngryMan01
    @TheLastAngryMan01 4 года назад +56

    In an unexpected historical turnaround, Ireland will now provide refuge to all the Brits exasperated by their own country.

    • @celticlofts
      @celticlofts 3 года назад +5

      Hey if you qualify for an Irish passport go for it I say. Things look to ge worse in the UK so having an Irish passport might help you a lot.

    • @TheLastAngryMan01
      @TheLastAngryMan01 3 года назад +5

      @@celticlofts It’s the only passport I qualify for ;) My gf and her siblings got one through their grandparents straight after the referendum, though.

    • @celticlofts
      @celticlofts 3 года назад +5

      @@TheLastAngryMan01 : Then that's another reason to marry that fine woman. Send her my love :-)

  • @FAngus-ly8lk
    @FAngus-ly8lk 4 года назад +42

    If one or both of your parents were born in Ireland, you are already deemed to be an Irish citizen. You just need to apply for a passport and provide your parents' birth and marriage certificates.

    • @muckle8
      @muckle8 Год назад

      I thought it was grandparents not parents ?

    • @JBCreatesUK
      @JBCreatesUK 5 месяцев назад

      Hey if i get a passport (my mums irish) can my wife and kids travel into shenghan area with me if they dont have one?

    • @FAngus-ly8lk
      @FAngus-ly8lk 5 месяцев назад

      @@JBCreatesUK - I'm not an expert, but I don't see why not. Depending on your family's citizenship (I assume you are American, Canadian or from some other developed, English-speaking country), they are probably admissible to most EU countries on a standard 90-day visitor's visa. In which case the Schengen area is open to them. Ireland is not part of the Schengen area, by the way - but EU citizenship gives full access to it, and freedom of movement, including the right of residence. If your kids have an Irish-born grandparent, they can apply for citizenship, too.

  • @SeanMMcCormack
    @SeanMMcCormack 4 года назад +21

    I was born in the US... but my father (and all my family) immigrated after WWII from Northern Ireland. At 56yrs. old, I decided to apply (via the Irish Consulate in Chicago) for my citizenship and passport. Fairly simple (just good documentation of my family) and in under 2 months I was accepted and have my Passport. So I'm now dual-citizenship (triple if you consider EU citizen) of both Ireland and the US. Very happy - and someday hope to retire there Eire.

  • @brettbambouturton3117
    @brettbambouturton3117 3 года назад +49

    I am an ex brit who has lived in Denmark for 23 years..
    I'm now a Irish citizen.. And proud of it..

    • @taintabird23
      @taintabird23 3 года назад +12

      Welcome to the broader Irish family!

    • @brettbambouturton3117
      @brettbambouturton3117 3 года назад +6

      @@taintabird23 a privilege indeed sir 😎👌

    • @edgardebruin8398
      @edgardebruin8398 3 года назад +3

      I might become irish, kinda depends if my non-EU wife can join me in Ireland. however my uncle lived in Ireland for most of his life and my cousin is born in Ireland.

    • @brettbambouturton3117
      @brettbambouturton3117 3 года назад +1

      @꧄꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄ ꧄ explain to me why not? My family are Irish, my parents are Irish...so explain to me your logic?

    • @brettbambouturton3117
      @brettbambouturton3117 3 года назад

      @꧄꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄𒐪꧄ ꧄ Sir .. I really Don't have to explain myself to you.. you know absolutely nothing about me or my heritage. So please move on to troll some one who gives you some attention . Or indeed find a good shrink to help you with what ever problem it is that you wake up with on a daily basis.

  • @boylebudley3320
    @boylebudley3320 4 года назад +26

    I left the UK a couple of years ago. Brexit didn't help, but the truth is living standards simply aren't very good in the UK in comparison to other states across Europe or Asia. Public services are mediocre, housing is far too expensive for what you get, crime is absolutely an issue in certain places and there's a general climate of unpleasantness and anger everywhere you go. I've lived in several other countries in my life (Finland, Japan, Singapore) and honestly, the UK is a bit of a joke in comparison to those.

    • @michaelblower7363
      @michaelblower7363 2 года назад +7

      I can definitely agree with you on the UK's flaws. Particularly the attitudes of unpleasantness and anger. :/

    • @いちごくん-l6d
      @いちごくん-l6d 2 года назад +3

      fellow well-travelled guy here. Lived in Shanghai, then Osaka been in many places in SE Asia. Now living in Sunderland. what a difference!! Damn this Corona!

  • @atgoldsmith
    @atgoldsmith 4 года назад +142

    I'm living in Poland. When I moved here (just after the referendum) I wasn't planning on staying more than three years, but since then my circumstances have changed and I'll have lived here for at least five years by the time I finish my studies. Therefore I'm considering staying an extra few years to try and apply for citizenship.

    • @Hadar1991
      @Hadar1991 4 года назад +9

      Does Polish citizenship do not require 10 years of living in Poland and fluency in Polish?

    • @atgoldsmith
      @atgoldsmith 4 года назад +31

      @@Hadar1991 According to what I've read on the Polish government website, after five years' continuous residence you can apply for permanent residence. After three more years (and completing a language test - about B1 level) you are eligible for citizenship.

    • @chillaxo9863
      @chillaxo9863 4 года назад +13

      @@atgoldsmith good luck from a fellow countryman

    • @atgoldsmith
      @atgoldsmith 4 года назад +7

      @@chillaxo9863 Cheers!

    • @Hadar1991
      @Hadar1991 4 года назад +8

      @@atgoldsmith If I recall correctly, maybe something changed after the influx of Ukrainians to Poland. But I won't lie - as a native Pole I never bother to check what steps must be completed before applying for citizenship of my country, although I though that the requirement are quite strict in comparison to rest of EU.

  • @stevenhubbard298
    @stevenhubbard298 4 года назад +39

    I became a German citizen at the end of 2018. They said that, since I applied before the actual Brexit, I could keep my UK citizenship. If I started my application after January 31st 2020, I'd have had to give it up. They accept multiple nationalities if the others are EU passports. Outside of the EU they only accept under special conditions.
    All in all I found the authorities here very helpful, sensible and flexible!

    • @tanellidesaragossa855
      @tanellidesaragossa855 4 года назад +7

      For me it is the other way round! I have a German citizenship by birth, and can keep it despite my British naturalisation taking place next week, as I applied for naturalisation before Brexit and the transitionary period

    • @konfluence
      @konfluence 4 года назад +3

      Wow I'm glad I read this comment. Best get on that application...

    • @WingedWords1117
      @WingedWords1117 4 года назад +1

      Do you have to speak at a high level of German to qualify? Do you need to have work there set up and ready before applying? Thanks in advance.

    • @rushinroulette4636
      @rushinroulette4636 4 года назад +3

      Vicky Pullin yes and not enough. You need to have an ok grasp of the language (not perfect, but still well above basic school German as a second language). You also need to have lived in Germany for at least 6 years unless you are an "exceptional talent" ( eg. A sportsman/woman who would represent Germany in the olympics or similar level) or a few other rare exceptions to shorten the residency requirement. You also need to already have a stable income and can prove that you can take care of yourself and your family wirhout needing support from the state.
      There are a few other requirements, but those are the major ones.

    • @Wawelman
      @Wawelman 4 года назад +1

      @@WingedWords1117 Why? Do you consider becoming a German citizen without speaking German? Stay in your own country if you want to speak English only!

  • @richardproctor6251
    @richardproctor6251 4 года назад +311

    Sounds like a lot of the EU countries are telling uk citizens with European heritage that they are more welcome in Europe than in UK.
    I've never been more thankful for my Irish heritage

    • @tusharsingh4543
      @tusharsingh4543 4 года назад +35

      Imagine Unionists being thankful of their Irish heritage haha

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад +2

      leftie McGobshite Most are full of it, if they haven’t got foreign citizenship already they aren’t going to.

    • @megaangelic
      @megaangelic 4 года назад +9

      Well that's a retarded stance on it, since the UK also grants EU citizens with UK heritage citizenship in basically the same way and has given much more assurances and guarantees for EU citizens than all the EU countries have for UK citizens. AND allowing dual citizenship, whereas Spain for example requires you to renounce British citizenship.

    • @sitrilko
      @sitrilko 4 года назад +3

      And why wouldn't they? The people already have some ties to their country (loose as they might be at the start) and odds are for them to be at least medium if not highly skilled workers.
      Sounds like a win for the countries to take those citizens away from Britain.

    • @Daniel-fv1ff
      @Daniel-fv1ff 4 года назад +1

      What makes them more welcome in the EU than UK?

  • @seangg03
    @seangg03 4 года назад +24

    Im irish, i was born in Ireland. Ye brits please dont abuse our passport system. Like ye abused our people above in the north.

    • @DirtyFecker69
      @DirtyFecker69 4 года назад +1

      Go home British soldier go on home...

    • @petersimmons3654
      @petersimmons3654 3 года назад

      The word you're searching for is 'you'. Still wallowing in the distant past eh?

  • @vinniechan
    @vinniechan 4 года назад +186

    Tell u the fastest way to get a French passport: serve in the French Foreign Legion 🤣🤣🤣

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer 4 года назад +7

      but you do loose your entire personal identity. Not only your nationality but even your name. At least that is what i understood.

    • @manorexia1964
      @manorexia1964 4 года назад +3

      That’s 5 years

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer 4 года назад +1

      @@StarKnightZ o that is new. might be interesting for my father. he is Dutch but lives in the USA.

    • @vinniechan
      @vinniechan 4 года назад +6

      @@sirBrouwer I think they change it and enlistment includes background checks by the Interpol
      There has been an effort to shakes it's reputation as hide outs for crooks and criminals at large

    • @vinniechan
      @vinniechan 4 года назад +14

      @@manorexia1964 there is a French by blood clause whereby if u get injured in combate while serving in the French military u have automatic rights to citizenships
      Which sounds quite fair to be honest

  • @sharadowasdr
    @sharadowasdr 4 года назад +253

    Hm Brits fleeing to Ireland. That's ironic :D

    • @Piisuke
      @Piisuke 4 года назад +15

      Not really fleeing to Ireland, they're requesting an Irish passport to retain their EU citizenship. You'll find that they'll likely stay in England.

    • @Danc1978
      @Danc1978 4 года назад +7

      Paddy's going home, where they should be anyway.

    • @Porkcylinder
      @Porkcylinder 4 года назад +10

      sharadowasdr it would be if it was an actual event and not just virtu tantrum throwing. I’d love to see them renounce their British citizenship, let’s see how many takers that gets

    • @phueal
      @phueal 4 года назад +17

      @@Porkcylinder I would take that. I'm staying in the UK, but if forced to choose between EU citizenship + relocating, or British citizenship, I'd choose EU.

    • @Porkcylinder
      @Porkcylinder 4 года назад +6

      phueal that’s absolutely fine. No one will stand in your way. I’ll even buy you a one way ticket.

  • @Vienna3080
    @Vienna3080 4 года назад +173

    Brexit is making Irish Unification actually possible
    What's next American Irish moving back?

    • @thegrandmuftiofwakanda
      @thegrandmuftiofwakanda 4 года назад +5

      No it isn’t. Popular vote still with Unionists “Despite Brexit”. Prat.

    • @boereherp8705
      @boereherp8705 4 года назад +28

      @@thegrandmuftiofwakanda billie doesn't have a sense of humor :-)

    • @SeanMMcCormack
      @SeanMMcCormack 4 года назад +15

      Yep - that is me. I'm ready to return to the land of my forefathers.

    • @thegrandmuftiofwakanda
      @thegrandmuftiofwakanda 4 года назад +3

      @@SeanMMcCormack Enjoy Pakistan.

    • @inquisitor229
      @inquisitor229 4 года назад +4

      American Irish returning? Please - not that! The country would standing room only, like passengers on the Tokyo metro. :>)

  • @Gillemear
    @Gillemear 4 года назад +152

    How ironic! After centuries of trying to make good English subjects out of the Irish, now over 1 million want to be citizens of the Irish Republic. Just 100 years ago, we were in a life-or-death battle for our independence from a British Empire hell bent on trying to keep us British. You could never make this up.

    • @Gillemear
      @Gillemear 4 года назад +1

      @Zuul Gatekeeper Maybe but look again at the headlines shown within the video 2:07 . It clearly says 1 million applicants for Irish passports, as does the narrator. Not saying you are wrong and they are right, just going with the evidence presented

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад +2

      Tuathal the True Well if a YT video says it...
      Want to buy some magic beans?

    • @yamyam2987
      @yamyam2987 4 года назад +1

      Well, they choose money more than anything else

    • @Gillemear
      @Gillemear 4 года назад

      @@mrmagoo-i2l Sigh, am just going with what is presented, as I said before. The truth of the matter is up to every individual to decide.

    • @Gillemear
      @Gillemear 4 года назад

      @Sassy The Sasquatch My point is that times have changed so dramatically since then.

  • @angela_merkeI
    @angela_merkeI 4 года назад +259

    Alas, we are witnessing the return of the Anglo-Saxons to the continent.

    • @johnwhittington2998
      @johnwhittington2998 4 года назад +8

      Dewey Dezimal unfortunately we have more scandanavian blood than German blood due to the Norman's conquest

    • @meneither3834
      @meneither3834 4 года назад +40

      @@johnwhittington2998 but the Norman were more French than Scandinavian.

    • @TheMurmandamus
      @TheMurmandamus 4 года назад +18

      @@meneither3834 The peoples of Normandy, during that time, were Norse settlers and their descendants who the Franks essentially bribed to not attack them by giving them that land, after being fed up with the constant raids. In a nutshell.

    • @meneither3834
      @meneither3834 4 года назад +26

      @@TheMurmandamus The ruler of the area were initially of Scandinavian origin, but they were mostly Men and married French women and spoke French.
      After two generation of that, they weren't Scandinavian anymore.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад +1

      uildanach2010 I can’t imagine the nomadic tribes going to Ireland then turning back then going up to Scotland.
      More like the same tribe split, some went to Ireland the others to Scotland.
      Just a guess though.

  • @Bestline7
    @Bestline7 4 года назад +5

    The irony of Brits begging for Irish passports is just too rich.

  • @insearchofnemo
    @insearchofnemo 4 года назад +5

    I know someone who voted for brexit and applied for Irish passport. This pisses me off and I told her this.

    • @kieranb892
      @kieranb892 4 года назад

      InSearch OfKnowledge I got my maltese passport and voted brexit. We are at liberty to vote for whatever we want whatever our race. Identity politics is so boring.

    • @FAngus-ly8lk
      @FAngus-ly8lk 5 месяцев назад

      No different from Nigel Farage and his kids with their German EU passports. And his fat EU parliamentary pension and benefits. The hypocrisy is off the charts.

  • @QuantumFluxable
    @QuantumFluxable 4 года назад +32

    As a German, feel welcome to live here. I can recommend Berlin, noone here furls a brow if someone speaks only English as they are used to tourists and it's a multicultural city in every regard. Unfortunately I'm not available for marriage, but I may be able to teach you a bit of German should we ever meet.

    • @rishikachaudhary512
      @rishikachaudhary512 4 года назад +1

      Nice

    • @petersimmons3654
      @petersimmons3654 3 года назад

      The third Reich, aka EU, is crumbling from within and more will be leaving soon. You only kept Denmark and Ireland by making threats, which didn't work with the Brits since we're used to threats from Germany. Your European project is on the way out, it was on;ly ever for the benefit of corrupt politicians and other power obsessives.

    • @seankane8628
      @seankane8628 3 года назад

      I would love to,

    • @_jpg
      @_jpg 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@petersimmons3654 Would you look at that, nearly a decade after the referendum no other EU country is considering to leave, there are even more applicants than before.

    • @petersimmons3654
      @petersimmons3654 6 месяцев назад

      @@_jpg It's a politician thing, more power, more clout among other nations, the people are another matter, most member states have a similar split as the UK, those who imagine it's beneficial to ordinary people, and those who don;t believe a word the bastards say. You go on being conned, little people often love 'pwerful leaders', Von Der Leyen imagines herself a cross between Hitler and Thatcher. We have always traded wityh European cpountries, it didn't need a political union, we always had free movement, neither did that. It's a politicians con, there is no need for anpother layer of corrupt politicos helping themsrlves to tax payers hard earned wages. They are already building a EU Armed Force, and will be taking over taxation soon.
      It's a drippy liberal dream, united Europe, no more war and free movement. But none of them saw the immigration surge coming, and are now rethinking free movement, which belonged in another age, the fifties. Immigration north is growing due to climate change, none of the politicians saw that cpoming.
      Remainers simply can't drop it, they understand nothing of what democracy means and have persisted in wantibng it to be thrown =away so they can feel good about being cosmopolitan.

  • @rskb1957
    @rskb1957 4 года назад +30

    applying for my Irish citizenship and passport (courtesy of an Irish grandfather) was the best way I could think of to stick two fingers up at Farage, Johnson, Rees Mogg et al. Other benefits? Fulfilling a long held dream to be a citizen of a republic and to forge some connection with the culture form which my family came (through the male line).

    • @taintabird23
      @taintabird23 4 года назад +5

      Welcome to the Irish nation...

    • @pockclash1276
      @pockclash1276 4 года назад

      Awesome

    • @user-ky6vw5up9m
      @user-ky6vw5up9m 4 года назад

      Rees-Mogg has interests in Ireland.

    • @grassytramtracks
      @grassytramtracks Год назад +2

      will be giving them the middle finger to that lot with my French passport via my French mother (though Nigel Farage actually secured EU passports for his children!)

  • @SamButler22
    @SamButler22 4 года назад +18

    I've been looking at Irish citizenship for around 15 years. My gran took me to her childhood home in Ireland every year as a child and I've always felt a little bit Irish. There was never any sense of urgency until the referendum though, and now that the fight is over I'll be applying soon. Also want to get applied while she's still with us.
    My dad, who isn't eligible, has been jealous ever since the day after the referendum!

  • @jjs3287
    @jjs3287 3 года назад +17

    The day we see people breaking into lorries at Dover to get back into the EU i will accept we have a problem.

    • @Jam77229
      @Jam77229 3 года назад +5

      Wow how shortsighted of you

    • @gloin10
      @gloin10 2 года назад

      @JJ S
      IF anyone did break "...into lorries at Dover to get back into the EU..." at the moment, they might well die of suffocation, or lack of food, before they actually got to Calais.
      A dinghy might be a better option....

  • @dukadarodear2176
    @dukadarodear2176 4 года назад +44

    There are at least 8 million people of Irish descent in mainland Britain.
    Everyone from Northern Ireland is automatically Irish.
    Many "Unionists" there have secretly applied for Irish passports and have been granted them automatically.

    • @nicchauvin1096
      @nicchauvin1096 3 года назад +1

      @Nathan Mcilveen It sounds like you didn't listen to the video.

    • @SuperDiagnostic
      @SuperDiagnostic 3 года назад

      Thank the lord 🙏🏼

    • @martinbyrne6643
      @martinbyrne6643 3 года назад +1

      I don’t believe a staunched unionists would ever harbour the idea of applying for an Irish passport, can u imagine the embarrassment of such a thing in your wallet.

    • @spareemail8711
      @spareemail8711 3 года назад

      No genuine Unionist would apply for an Irish passport.

    • @PS-ru2ov
      @PS-ru2ov 2 года назад +5

      @@martinbyrne6643 i am a unionist, i have a Irish passport for practical reasons

  • @flymb3358
    @flymb3358 4 года назад +52

    Please move to Finland, we need more people

    • @technicalfool
      @technicalfool 4 года назад +15

      I know at least one person who did just that shortly after the referendum. They're still there and enjoying it. Kinda helps they were born there and have some family ties though.
      As for everyone else, I don't know how many Brits could cope with a Finnish winter, even in the South where it's not inside the Arctic circle.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад +19

      I’ll send you my mother in law.
      You’ve got to keep her though.

    • @MrBurgeri
      @MrBurgeri 4 года назад +1

      @@technicalfool Not a problem this winter. Looks like November in London out there...

    • @flymb3358
      @flymb3358 4 года назад +3

      @@technicalfool Well because of climate change, we'll probably have beaches and palm trees here in a couple years. JK but the winters have got really warm in the past few years.

    • @Katastra_
      @Katastra_ 4 года назад +1

      If Finland needs more people, do they have relatively easy immigration/citizenship rules?

  • @gilesdunk7416
    @gilesdunk7416 4 года назад +114

    How about move up to Scotland and wait for independence! 😂😂

    • @akooma3694
      @akooma3694 4 года назад +6

      EU has already said they would not accept Scotland into the EU lol

    • @MrKarlyboy
      @MrKarlyboy 4 года назад

      Nah Scotlands run by a rabbid krankie and she has no answers. Scotland won't survive, I know many people who would leave, take their business south, and withdraw all their investments from there. Take away the Barnet formula and it won't work. I don't think so

    • @kakab66
      @kakab66 4 года назад +4

      @@akooma3694 frustrated brexiters like to believe so, but I don't think Scotland would be denied entry into the EU. If a region secedes from an EU country, then its application to join back EU as an independent country would be problematic ie if ever Catalogne should leave Spain, its joining of EU would be very difficult. On the other hand, Scotland won't be seceding from an EU country, but rather from a non EU country (or rather an ex-EU country) and hence will be very welcome back in EU.

    • @cakeisyummy5755
      @cakeisyummy5755 3 года назад

      @@akooma3694 Well, I guess the scotts will be damned.

    • @justfelix9199
      @justfelix9199 3 года назад +3

      @@akooma3694 - They never said that, check your sources. They said they won't have the automatically right to join the EU, and they would have to join a queue.

  • @spoopytime9928
    @spoopytime9928 4 года назад +166

    "Due to the influx of too many citizen applications, we have decided to introduce a new method of citizenship acquirement. Applicants must be able to peel 15 potatoes in 3 minutes, and drink a liter of Guiness in 45 seconds."

    • @tygonmaster
      @tygonmaster 4 года назад +35

      Sounds like that could work for Germany's citizenship requirements as well

    • @CashelOConnolly
      @CashelOConnolly 4 года назад +8

      spoopytime racist

    • @blugill2273
      @blugill2273 4 года назад +3

      not very hard but still challenging

    • @Pining_for_the_fjords
      @Pining_for_the_fjords 4 года назад +6

      @@tygonmaster And Russia, just change Guinness to vodka.

    • @CashelOConnolly
      @CashelOConnolly 4 года назад +1

      Pining for the fjords and for people coming to Britain ,Carlsberg Special Brew and a Greg’s pasty

  • @snowcold5932
    @snowcold5932 4 года назад +97

    6:55 "citizens also can't hold dual nationality"
    *laughs in dual spanish/french nationality by birth*

    • @franciscoborquezk.155
      @franciscoborquezk.155 4 года назад +23

      That's because most dual citizenship limitations are not imposed on birthrights, but naturalisation.

    • @luthor24127
      @luthor24127 4 года назад +5

      Yeah, they can't *make you* get rid of one of your nationalities.

    • @jamest5149
      @jamest5149 4 года назад +2

      Yep my Australian/British passports plus 10 yrs in Spain say otherwise.

    • @agustinentratico3081
      @agustinentratico3081 4 года назад +1

      So is it Spain that doesn't accept dual citizenship?

    • @usarkarzts4207
      @usarkarzts4207 4 года назад +2

      @@agustinentratico3081 there are exceptions, but generally you have to renounce to your other nationality.

  • @AaronOkeanos
    @AaronOkeanos 4 года назад +40

    The first question by the Irish should be "Do you voted for Brexit" if you answer yes it should be denied. It would be the high of hybris if you voted for the need to this step, but at the same time try to circumvent it's consequences with a foreign passport.

    • @meneither3834
      @meneither3834 4 года назад +3

      I get where you're coming from but that would go against a core principle of democracy.

    • @AaronOkeanos
      @AaronOkeanos 4 года назад +1

      @@meneither3834 You know nothing and names can be deceiving.
      What principal is preventing a country to insert this questions into their citizenship-forms?

    • @meneither3834
      @meneither3834 4 года назад +7

      @@AaronOkeanos hidden ballots is necessary for a healthy democracy.

    • @jas1049
      @jas1049 4 года назад +4

      Actually, I think I agree with this. I feel quite conflicted about Brits getting Irish passports in the wake of Brexit, especially if they are not living here. Relations between the two countries are as bad as they have been in years directly because of people in Britain voting for Brexit. On that basis, I’m not sure I could welcome a Brexit voter as a fellow Irish passport holder, particularly if they were applying just to hold on to EU access. I would definitively feel aggrieved about that.

    • @capnskiddies
      @capnskiddies 4 года назад

      Who would answer that question at all? Nevermind who would answer honestly

  • @anttibjorklund1869
    @anttibjorklund1869 4 года назад +114

    "Why learn a foreign lingo m8, we're br1tish innit?"
    - some brexiteer, probably

    • @Xuhybrid
      @Xuhybrid 4 года назад +12

      Look at this mature individual who isn't at all condescending.

    • @london_james
      @london_james 4 года назад +3

      Decent argument to be fair 🤣

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад +9

      Translation, “English is the most popular second language, it is less important to learn the native tongue”.
      Yes, it’s a logical conclusion.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад +9

      Xuhybrid Look at that individual who can speak English and who is on a British site.
      The lack of self awareness is laughable.
      “Ooh those dirty poor people”.
      They have scraped enough money together with overtime for their one holiday a year and haven’t had time to be fluent in a language in a country they are going to be in for two weeks.
      Let’s laugh at them.
      What a set of snobs this channel attracts. It’s disgusting.

    • @Xuhybrid
      @Xuhybrid 4 года назад +4

      @@mrmagoo-i2l Learn to read lol.

  • @brennenderopa
    @brennenderopa 4 года назад +111

    "common language"
    Someone has never been to Ireland.

    • @TheLastAngryMan01
      @TheLastAngryMan01 4 года назад +34

      Well, a fairly small number of people speak Irish every day as their mother tongue, so I don't see much wrong with his statement there.

    • @brennenderopa
      @brennenderopa 4 года назад +7

      @@TheLastAngryMan01 I was actually talking about the dialect the irish have. It is like the scottish dialect but somehow harder to understand.

    • @TheLastAngryMan01
      @TheLastAngryMan01 4 года назад +4

      @uildanach2010 Yes and no. Yeah, the structure of Irish English is obviously influenced by an Ghaeilge, and the slang and whatnot can be puzzling to a non-Irish person at first. But honestly, I went to live in Ireland at the age of eleven and had no problems (and spoke better Gaeilge than the local kids, strangely) and my English girlfriend doesn't have too many problems with my West of Ireland dialect. I think it depends on the person and how willing they are to adjust.
      Even then, I've lived in non-English speaking countries, and it's a lot harder, even when you speak the language to some extent.

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive 4 года назад +4

      uildanach2010 by that metric Americans and Brits also speak different languages.

    • @Jcolbert123
      @Jcolbert123 4 года назад +4

      @@brennenderopa
      Geordie, Manc and Cockney are almost impossible to understand when you're not from their regions...
      The Irish plantations saw the British move a lot of Scots to Ireland and from this I would expect that Ireland and Scotland have similar dialects but this would be more concentrated in the north of Ireland (not NI but the northern half of the island).

  • @malahammer
    @malahammer 4 года назад +48

    "British ex pats"...you mean immigrants.

    • @petersimmons3654
      @petersimmons3654 3 года назад +3

      No, from the perspective of Britain they are ex pats, from that of Europe they are immigrants. Funny how many ill-educated who don't understand word differences think they've made a point!

    • @mogznwaz
      @mogznwaz 3 года назад

      Expat is how Brits refer to themselves when they *leave* Britain so they're emigrants not immigrants. Those who immigrate into Britain are entitled to refer to themselves however they like including as expats. The countries the Brits are going to I've no doubt call the British incomers 'immigrants'.

    • @malahammer
      @malahammer 3 года назад +1

      @@mogznwaz they can and will call themselves whatever they want. They are no different than the African, Asian and West Indies immigrants in the UK.

    • @mogznwaz
      @mogznwaz 3 года назад +1

      @@malahammer Which was, I think, my point 🤔

    • @malahammer
      @malahammer 3 года назад +1

      @@mogznwaz sorry! Missed that :)

  • @aimeerivers
    @aimeerivers 4 года назад +10

    I’m British but moved to Denmark just over a year ago. Looking forward to one day beginning Danish and therefore being an EU citizen again. It made me so sad country decided to take away an identity that I feel very strongly. I’m grateful that the EU gave me the chance to live and work in a different country.

    • @britopia1341
      @britopia1341 4 года назад

      aimee rivers The UK didn’t take away an identity that you feel very strongly.. That just didn’t happen. You were a UK citizen in a UK which was a member of a club, you were never an EU citizen. The EU doesn’t have citizens. It’s is Denmark you should be thankful to not the EU. Denmark is a beautiful country.

    • @aimeerivers
      @aimeerivers 4 года назад

      Britopia Denmark is indeed a really beautiful country, and I am very grateful to it for welcoming me. But if we’re talking about feelings, I do feel like something has changed for me in my identity. Whether or not that feeling is valid is another matter, but you can’t deny me my feelings.

    • @britopia1341
      @britopia1341 4 года назад

      aimee rivers I don’t deny your feelings. Of course not. It’s just that that particular one was slightly off target. Many people feel the same. Mostly because people use and let the term “EU citizen/s” carry validity. But it doesn’t actually exist. Much of the time it’s just down to “citizens of EU member states” being a mouthful to say. I’m pretty sure one day the UK will come to arrangements with the different European countries (including migration) but the problem is being a member of the EU meant that the UK had to treat everyone equally. But thats not how real life works. In real life we have preferences. For love, For Friendships and for groups. For instance The UK is warmer to Denmark then Romania but we can’t show it being members of the EU. It’s a shame it was pushed on us like this because it meant we also had to get rid of some of the stuff we did like along with a lot of the stuff we didn’t.

    • @aimeerivers
      @aimeerivers 4 года назад

      Britopia thank you for that most respectful way of pointing out where I’m wrong. I really appreciate that.

  • @christopherseton-smith7404
    @christopherseton-smith7404 4 года назад +9

    The real "irony" was watching a programme on "ex-pats"who had retired to Spain to live in their English speaking communes having voted for Brexit, and expressing outrage that it mght affect them after all.

    • @dannyboy5517
      @dannyboy5517 3 года назад +1

      Not ex pats they are immigrants

    • @petersimmons3654
      @petersimmons3654 3 года назад

      Said without a scrsap of proof ex-pat Brits voted for Brexit. All the evidence points to them being solidly pro remain. So erhaps you misunderstood or the programme lied.

    • @BrianMcGuirkBMG
      @BrianMcGuirkBMG 3 года назад +1

      @@petersimmons3654
      Plenty of examples of interviews available of British in Spain where they voted leave.
      Brexiters voted in the main to reduce freedoms only for other people. They mostly didn't expect to be adversely affected in any real way.

  • @Carolus_Tsang
    @Carolus_Tsang 4 года назад +18

    Oh how the tables have turned..... Brits begging to become Irish when back in the 1800s Irish nationality was seen by Brits as a backward concept.

    • @britopia1341
      @britopia1341 4 года назад +1

      Karl Tsang They aren’t begging they’re applying because they’re entitled. They’re entitled because they have Irish heritage. Roughly 80,000 RoI citizens who just also happened to be UK citizens applied for RoI passports last year not 1 million.

    • @millhilljimjimmy6731
      @millhilljimjimmy6731 4 года назад

      If I have a blue passport can I go on holiday to Europe yes or no

    • @SM-ly5tf
      @SM-ly5tf 3 года назад

      @@millhilljimjimmy6731 yes

  • @TheIamtheoneandonly1
    @TheIamtheoneandonly1 4 года назад +13

    As I understand it, 30% (approx) of all Brits have some Irish heritage in their family background somewhere if you go back far enough. As an aside, the way Poland's economy is going, give it about another 10 years and it might be the Brits who are going over there to live and work just as we did in Germany during the 1970s / 80s. The irony isn't lost on me!

    • @Victor-tl4dk
      @Victor-tl4dk 4 года назад +5

      Yep Poland is an amazing country and it is growing!!! So ironic! But the Brits did put themselves into this position.

    • @eekamoose
      @eekamoose 4 года назад +1

      Brits won’t automatically be able to go and work ANYWHERE in the EU from 31 December. The post-Brexit recession is going to hit hard when Brits can’t be economic immigrants in Europe as they were in Germany in the 1970s and 1980s. Fortunately, the recession will hit northern cities which overwhelmingly voted for Brexit hardest. Karma’s a bitch...

    • @desmondobrien68
      @desmondobrien68 3 года назад

      @@eekamoose There was no EU in the 70s 0r 80s it was called the EEC back then and there was no freedom of movement then like today!

    • @eekamoose
      @eekamoose 3 года назад +1

      Desmond O'Brien You seem to have gone quiet, mate. Could it be that, like most Brexit supporters, you have no grasp of basic facts and no idea what you are talking about? The votes of people like you in the 2016 referendum are already crippling the British economy but you had no idea what you were voting for or against, you ignored just about every expert and specialist in the country and believed the crap spread by the Daily Express and millionaires like Farage. But unless you are a millionaire yourself or live outside the UK you will suffer the fallout from the Brexit that you so badly wanted. Sure, the UK will survive, possibly without Scotland in a few years, but it will be poorer. Prices and unemployment are already rising, the car industry is collapsing and wages are going to fall. And a generation from now, when the worst of the right-wing gammons are dead, Britain will be pleading to join the EU again.

    • @mickeencrua
      @mickeencrua 2 месяца назад

      The percentage of Brits with Irish ancestry is based on "Official " figures. Brits should ask themselves this question; "Who was "looking after" granny while grandad was in Normandy/North Africa/Burma etc..?" A nationwide DNA survey would produce some very interesting results.

  • @molybdomancer195
    @molybdomancer195 4 года назад +5

    My kids found out at their grandfather's funeral that he had been born in Belfast, so my son is now a dual national thanks to my deceased father-in-law. Sadly I have no way of keeping my EU citizenship :(

  • @tm23822
    @tm23822 4 года назад +49

    Brits finding out to move to another country and get citizenship rights, you actually have to learn another language. Lmao

    • @milosm9280
      @milosm9280 4 года назад

      I mean they can move to Ireland.

    • @MrKarlyboy
      @MrKarlyboy 4 года назад +1

      5 core Languages are spoken and are culturally native in the UK. and many more besides which are non-native. Comments like this shows the level of intelligence of the poster, when more languages are spoken in the UK than anywhere else on earth. This is is a fact. I'm native UK and I speak 4 languages. So do try to f**king keep up! I know many natives who speak more than one language. The fact is English is the global dominant language, which is down to the UK's history, the fact the language is easy to grasp and a further push by the United States development over the last century to keep it that way. So you can bleat all you like but the British achieved something no other country on earth has achieved. I bet that makes you feel smart now does it not?

    • @milosm9280
      @milosm9280 4 года назад

      @@MrKarlyboy i hate the comments like brits only use english to talk to ppl abroad . Like what do u want them to try to learn 10 languages? Also most ppl who know english probably would know it if german or spanish was the world's language.

    • @christophercook7445
      @christophercook7445 3 года назад

      @@MrKarlyboy From reading comments on RUclips I don't think many can write English and probably don't speak it well (I certainly don't mean immigrants).

    • @sammybesr3989
      @sammybesr3989 3 года назад

      Brits can move to Ireland for 5 years if they want an EU passport - or they can pay a Romanian gypsy a few pounds! Either way, they don’t need learn a new language - and those many immigrants can’t visit the UK, as easily. (Not all bad! I moved to Ireland - 4 years ago. So I will be applying my passport soon, and then moving to sunny Spain. The weather in Ireland is worse than the UK!

  • @mujtabaellari2597
    @mujtabaellari2597 4 года назад +46

    I'm kinda surprised the Netherlands isn't a more popular choice.

    • @Piisuke
      @Piisuke 4 года назад +3

      @Another NPC Not much more, if at all, than Spain. Five years in the country, speak the Language, renounce your current nationality (unless married / civ partnered to a Dutch national,

    • @cs1810
      @cs1810 4 года назад +10

      They don't allow dual citizenship for naturalisation, and you have to pass a language test.

    • @Yoshi_206
      @Yoshi_206 4 года назад +1

      How can you live there long enough to naturalize if you can't get a work permit?

    • @angrytedtalks
      @angrytedtalks 4 года назад +1

      Too far left.

    • @pbac9570
      @pbac9570 4 года назад +5

      I'm Irish and studying in the Netherlands. They make everything difficult for you, with delays in registration or not clearing out previous tenants from the property register, limiting the services you receive. I've also had trouble finding work and have had to work for less than minimum wage.

  • @clowncarqingdao
    @clowncarqingdao 4 года назад +4

    Quite pissed off that so many rich elite Brexit supporters have applied for EU passports or have them already.

    • @klausbrinck2137
      @klausbrinck2137 4 года назад

      So, you have thought, that rich elite Brexit supporters don´t have a plan B, in case plan A works...? That´s cute ;-)

  • @FMORAIS
    @FMORAIS 4 года назад +25

    Non-Brexiters will always be welcome in Portugal!

    • @nourdaniel2437
      @nourdaniel2437 4 года назад +2

      Salaheddine Aziz
      Probably you didn’t and you would never get what he meant by that

    • @FMORAIS
      @FMORAIS 4 года назад +2

      @@salaheddineaziz1076 Not really. Many intelligent British investors and youngsters come to Portugal to implement businesses and to have fun. But I guess you wouldn't know it, probably because you're not learning from them.

    • @annarehbinder7540
      @annarehbinder7540 4 года назад +1

      Beautiful country and with the worlds best pastry, really nice wine, great seafood and lovly and fairly easy language to learn .... frozen swede here ... sounds really nice ! Including.... actual palmtrees !

    • @FMORAIS
      @FMORAIS 4 года назад +2

      Anna Rehbinder I heard Sweden has the best snow mountains, mashed potatoes, meatballs and beautiful blonde women, so you’re doing great as well :)

    • @louisokeefe8307
      @louisokeefe8307 4 года назад +2

      Im Irish and im coming over for the fun and sun. Respect to Portugal from Eire

  • @jojocavallo3847
    @jojocavallo3847 4 года назад +7

    You didn’t mention Italy . It accepts dual nationality. It took me 18 months to gain citizenship and two weeks to get a passport. Highly efficient- believe it to not. However, I am married to an Italian

    • @celticlofts
      @celticlofts 3 года назад +1

      I have three Brazilian friends living here in Ireland who have already applied for Italian citizenship through their grandparents. That way they'll be able to remain in Ireland without having to renew their visas.

  • @kimrsns7363
    @kimrsns7363 4 года назад +3

    If any of those Brits applying for an ‘EU Passport’ voted FOR BREXIT, we should DENY THEIR APPLICATION OUTRIGHT!!

    • @kimrsns7363
      @kimrsns7363 4 года назад

      Joshua Simpson You obviously are a ‘Brexiteer’! If you have a decent salary, you will NOT be effected by Brexit, but what about those who are not so fortunate? It seems to me that you do NOT care AT ALL about ‘your brother and sister’!?! Well, I say to you: you will receive the JUDGMENT you deserve on ‘Judgment Day!

    • @kimrsns7363
      @kimrsns7363 4 года назад

      Apparently, you are of the opinion that you do NOT have to answer for your actions when you die. Well, I can only ask you to contemplate this simple question: what if YOU ARE WRONG? You obviously do NOT value the lives of your ‘neighbours’, neither do you value your OWN LIFE! That is the EPIDEMY OF SAD!

  • @NotYowBusiness
    @NotYowBusiness 4 года назад +71

    "Island of island" or "Ireland of Ireland" ?

    • @eamonnogmcconnaghie7670
      @eamonnogmcconnaghie7670 4 года назад +19

      He said "Island of Ireland" meaning all of Ireland including Northern Ireland

    • @seanegan8150
      @seanegan8150 4 года назад +21

      Ireland of Island

    • @hannahg8439
      @hannahg8439 4 года назад +4

      @@eamonnogmcconnaghie7670 that was helpful, thanks!

    • @ekx5120
      @ekx5120 4 года назад +4

      @@seanegan8150 That's definitely what I heard.

    • @MichaelTavares
      @MichaelTavares 4 года назад +2

      It’s be good if he could pronounce the hard R in Ireland, even though it’s not a natural part of his accent, he could intentionally do it to be clear.

  • @elijahfordsidioticvarietys8770
    @elijahfordsidioticvarietys8770 4 года назад +20

    This is basically the British version of "If Donald Trump wins, I'm moving to Canada!". LOL.

    • @CharlieVane21
      @CharlieVane21 4 года назад +1

      No one would actually move to Ireland, they're not that crazy. More about having an EU passport. Me, I'm marching on without one.

    • @britopia1341
      @britopia1341 4 года назад

      Elijah Ford Very true. It’s just feet stomping. But to be honest The UK and the RoI have free movement with each other and this has nothing to do with the EU. Any RoI citizen can come to live and work in the UK and vice versa. Many UK citizens move to the RoI anyway and will continue to. Again it’s nothing to do with the UK leaving the EU. There are some people in the RoI parliament that are worried because many of the people gaining RoI citizenship lean towards the UK. This means that British Unionism will grow in the Republic of Ireland.

  • @jas1049
    @jas1049 3 года назад +3

    I’m Irish and have always felt very friendly to our British neighbours. I have to say though that Brexit has changed my views. I think that the conduct of certain UK politicians, of aspects of the UK media and the publicly expressed views of many British citizens has been so unnecessarily insulting and derisory of Ireland and of the EU in general during the period since 2016 that my genuine view is that if there was a legal way to ban every Brexiteer from ever entering Ireland or the EU or ever doing any business with us again, I would vote in favour of it.

    • @taintabird23
      @taintabird23 3 года назад +3

      My own sentiments exactly. It is the remainers in the UK I feel sorry for. They are stuck with these people.

  • @sarowie
    @sarowie 4 года назад +8

    For Germany: You forgot two important details: "Usually" you have to give up your citizenship. Naturalization becomes a lot easier when married to a German. You need to take a culture/history test and a language test (if you can not prove your German skills with relevant school diplomas).

    • @jimroberts1943
      @jimroberts1943 4 года назад

      "You need to take a culture/history test and a language test"
      I think that depends on where you live in Germany (which Land). In Bavaria, as you say. In Lower Saxony, not so much.

    • @blossom8160
      @blossom8160 4 года назад +1

      For ‘western’ countries, it’s _NOT_ that hard to be granted a “_Beibehaltungsgenehmigung_”,
      (permission to keep German citizenship and take up a second citizenship).
      Mine was granted within DAYS, and _EVERY_ German I know here who chose to become Australian has kept their German citizenship. And there are an estimated 10,000 native speakers of German in Greater Canberra (including, Swiss, Austrians, Belgians, Bavarians etc) 😉
      10k in a total population of under 500k!
      I even know several dual citizens who don’t speak _ANY_ German! 😱
      They usually need someone to go with them whenever they have to go to the German Embassy .... poor buggers. 😔
      Of course I don’t know all of them - but everybody I can think of has both citizenships (or not eligible to become Australian yet).
      I never needed to do an English language test either (AU does not have an official language, so certain immigrants, like spouses) don’t need to speak English.
      And German is one of the most commonly taught foreign language in Australian schools. 😁
      Oh, also: there are a LOT more ALDIs here in Canberra than I’ve ever seen in any big German city north of the Black Forest!
      *>~~•oOo•~~

    • @sarowie
      @sarowie 4 года назад

      @@blossom8160 permission to keep German citizenship and gaining an other is easier then gaining German citizenship while keeping the other. So, the order is important. But yes, there are exception but in place for EU countries.

    • @rushinroulette4636
      @rushinroulette4636 4 года назад

      Michael Frey for naturalisation as a German citizen you can always keep your older citizenship as long as it is an eu country and that country allows it. You only need to renounce your old citizenship if it is a non eu country or that country explicitly demand it.

    • @mr.clanni9930
      @mr.clanni9930 2 года назад

      @@rushinroulette4636 u don’t have to give up you’re nationality if it’s impossible to do so. Ex, Argentinian citizens get to keep their citizenship when naturalizing in Germany because it is impossible to renounce an Argentinian citizenship.

  • @TheCyborg94
    @TheCyborg94 4 года назад +7

    I'm from Northern England and apparently have Irish, Scottish and Scandinavian ancestry/heritage from a few generations ago (1st great grandparents and 2nd great grandparents), but sadly I'm one generation out of luck for an Irish passport and a few generations out luck for a passport in Norway or Sweden. I'm planning/hoping to move to Sweden, Denmark or Norway. I've already lived in Sweden because my ex girlfriend was from there and loved it! So I'm going to head back eventually. The UK morbidly depressing and I don't see much future here.

    • @bradavon
      @bradavon 3 года назад

      Generations ago! It only extends as far as Grand kids.

    • @TheCyborg94
      @TheCyborg94 3 года назад

      @@bradavon Yeah, I know that's the sad part about it. I also have ancestry/heritage from Scandinavia, too, in the recent few generations.

  • @randomjasmicisrandom
    @randomjasmicisrandom 4 года назад +38

    My cousin received her Irish passport a few weeks ago, having gone through the route of a parent or grandparent being Irish. I am so English it’s painful with no foreign background for at least four generations (everyone in my family for generations was from the Slough/Langley area.) I am looking at Germany as I am ex British Army, spent years living here. I have taken and passed my Einbürgerung test and take my German Language B1 Prüfung in a few weeks.
    What I like about this video is it demonstrates how the EU countries have their own entry requirements and haven’t become a single entity, one of the things many people in favour of Brexit feared.

    • @FriedrichHerschel
      @FriedrichHerschel 4 года назад +2

      Which is fascinating, because being granted citizenship in one country grants you rights in all of them. You might think they want a say in it then.
      Does your military servive time in Germany really allowing you to ask for citizenship?

    • @timor64
      @timor64 4 года назад

      @@FriedrichHerschel i suspect he stayed on or returned. EDIT: "returned" meaning "returned to Germany"

    • @Sanderos25
      @Sanderos25 4 года назад +7

      @@FriedrichHerschel In joining the EU there are minimum regulations all countries have to pass, making it harder is up to the country themselves.
      This goes back to that line of Boris, "We can make our own laws".
      You already could, as long as they were at least par with the EU laws, if you want to improve safety laws of social laws etc. feel free.
      You just can't go below the EU threshold, so what he is actually saying is "we want to lower our standards"

    • @ryanstark2350
      @ryanstark2350 4 года назад +2

      Sander van Veen Our law in the UK is common law which is totally incompatible with tyrannical EU law. Under common law you can do what you want as long as you don’t harm others or breach contracts. It’s called freedom which the EU can’t comprehend.

    • @randomjasmicisrandom
      @randomjasmicisrandom 4 года назад +7

      Ryan Stark do you talk bs all the time, or do you save it all up for RUclips?

  • @emilchandran546
    @emilchandran546 4 года назад +23

    Everyone in the comments with this strange conflation of obtaining an EU passport and leaving the UK.
    Ummm... passports are for travel you know, like if they want to travel, having the EU passport will get them easier and cheaper access to many countries.
    It is one of the most powerful passports in the world. I can see why a lot of people might want one, if they have family in Europe, if they travel for business, or if they intend to take a holiday in Europe or any of the other countries that don’t require a visa for EU passport holders.
    This wasn’t a “love it or leave it” video it was just about passports.

    • @pirhot4283
      @pirhot4283 4 года назад +1

      Sure, furthermore French and German passmort are 3rd place exaequo in terms of power.

    • @starlinguk
      @starlinguk 4 года назад +8

      It's not just about travel. It's also about work. It means that if you can't find a job in Britain you can find one elsewhere in Europe, without restrictions on how much you need to earn.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад

      Arya1999 Yes, the continent is dying to hire a halfwit with a history of art degree and 6 months Starbucks experience.

    • @k.e.w
      @k.e.w 4 года назад +5

      A passport is a big thing ... As others said not only for travel. It's a symbol of being in the EU and working rights ... In the end millions have chosen to move and I'm sure the other country's are more than happy to make it easier for the British to be accepted. I lived 10 years myself in the UK and find it really sad what the UK has become.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад

      BABAYAGA DELTA What free?
      Enjoy slavery, ironically Ursula Von der Leyen’s family made their money from plantations.
      It’s very apt.

  • @philliprogers964
    @philliprogers964 4 года назад +6

    The Brits fleeing to the countries they battled in WW2... Priceless

    • @a2falcone
      @a2falcone 4 года назад +1

      Ireland, Spain, France, Portugal and Poland??

    • @millhilljimjimmy6731
      @millhilljimjimmy6731 4 года назад

      Their must be lots of jobs in the EU for the taking by Brits then

  • @Bhethar
    @Bhethar 4 года назад +19

    A colleague kept jokingly offering to marry me so I could get a UK passport.
    I told him maybe It should be the other way around since he's the one loosing all the EU travel and busines rights 😂

    • @azomboup
      @azomboup 4 года назад

      😂😂😂 🤔🤔 and you can get British citizenship without losing your EU citizen

    • @Bhethar
      @Bhethar 4 года назад

      @@azomboup and most importantly, without marrying anyone 😂

  • @D.A.R.G.A.F
    @D.A.R.G.A.F 4 года назад +2

    So what you saying, apply for a passport but do it for your own selfish reason, not that you want to live and work and be part of Irish Culture. Shocking advice in my opinion, exploitation of Irish immigration system if you ask me. Shame on TLDR for making this video.

  • @timlinator
    @timlinator 2 года назад +1

    I'm Irish-American, dad born in Ireland and I have had an Irish passport for over 20 years. Trump lost so my move to Ireland is on hold for now. Orange buffoon may be back.

  • @tokiomitohsaka7770
    @tokiomitohsaka7770 4 года назад +3

    I actually know one of the British citizens trying to become polish as a result of brexit. Didn’t know there were so few moving to Poland, all the pierogi are worth moving for by themselves.

  • @johnnicolson467
    @johnnicolson467 3 года назад +5

    After Scottish Independence in 2021 we will join the EU again

    • @taintabird23
      @taintabird23 3 года назад

      Fingers crossed.

    • @aperson.7738
      @aperson.7738 2 года назад

      I think it’s too late for Scottish independence now, I’d say SNP had their support for it when brexit happened but it’s faltered out now and I doubt a referendum would succeed

  • @Mugdorna
    @Mugdorna 4 года назад +3

    In fairness, Arlene Foster is entitled to Irish citizenship.

    • @dukadarodear2176
      @dukadarodear2176 4 года назад +2

      Many, many Northern Irish 'Unionists' have a spanking new Irish Passport in the garden shed (if they're male) and sewn into the lining of their handbag (if they're female) and other such places.

  • @petersmith9689
    @petersmith9689 4 года назад +2

    The population of the Republic of Ireland is just under five million. Does one million new passports mean a 20% increase in population? I suspect that many Brits whose grandmother once watched an episode of Father Ted are applying for the Irish passport so that they can live and work anywhere in the EU.

    • @taintabird23
      @taintabird23 4 года назад +1

      Most Irish passport holders are part of the Irish diaspora and do not live in Ireland.

    • @taintabird23
      @taintabird23 3 года назад

      @Nathan Mcilveen What do mean?

  • @jjlennon07
    @jjlennon07 4 года назад +3

    If you are married to an Irish citizen(I am by the way), you can apply for citizenship if you have live on the island of Ireland for 3 yrs not 5yrs. And you must have lived on the Ireland for a full year prior to your application.

  • @groudyogre
    @groudyogre 4 года назад +5

    It really bothers me that if you're British you're an 'expat' but everyone else is an immigrant.

    • @niallkinsella2687
      @niallkinsella2687 4 года назад

      @Chris Collins
      Irish people who emigrate to Australia or the UK don't give up their nationality, but they're still emigrants from Ireland and immigrants to the new country.
      British people are no different except they don't like the migrant label.

  • @waywed
    @waywed 4 года назад +3

    One other useful point. If you live in the UK on some sort of visa or permit but are not a UK citizen, an Irish passport will mean you can still live and work there under the Common Travel Area provisions between UK and Ireland which will continue after 31 December 2020.

  • @mrreality4735
    @mrreality4735 4 года назад +10

    I am a brit, all the way back. I also live in Aus. There's no helping me, and i'm very sad about it. For me, freedom of movement is my favourite part of having an EU Passport, and it's disappointing to know that will be gone soon enough.

    • @mobiuscoreindustries
      @mobiuscoreindustries 4 года назад +2

      Just wait for the market crash. Once politics will have bailed their money oversea those that will be left will most likely sue for a trade deal at any cost. That would by default implies a restoration of freedom of movement, except of course that the UK would lose all their privileges that actually kept it interesting as a EU power.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад +2

      Adrien Mansuy The North holds the keys to who becomes PM.
      Restoring freedom of movement is political suicide. The north won’t accept it.
      A party only wants to be in power, nothing else matters.

    • @ekx5120
      @ekx5120 4 года назад +1

      @@mrmagoo-i2l Are you George R. R. Martin? :D

    • @WingedWords1117
      @WingedWords1117 4 года назад +1

      @@ekx5120 We've already bent the knee.

    • @xxxalexxx309
      @xxxalexxx309 4 года назад

      @@mrmagoo-i2l I think the north will be the first to be hit hard by any impacts and won't be able to blame the eu anymore so will be very confused and start voting green

  • @pointless7453
    @pointless7453 Год назад +1

    Brexit doesn't affect me as much as it may affect other people: I am a British citizen and a German citizen which grants me access to EU rights. The only thing that Brexit changes is that I always need to scramble to renew my German passport to keep my (easy) travel access!

  • @LeojPT
    @LeojPT 4 года назад +4

    In Portugal, there is also the gold visa: if you invest 500’000 euros in real estate or create a company with at least 10 employees, you’ll have an expedite visa process.

    • @thegrandmuftiofwakanda
      @thegrandmuftiofwakanda 4 года назад +1

      Yeh but Portugal is a shithole.

    • @ryanhuntrajput474
      @ryanhuntrajput474 4 года назад

      @@thegrandmuftiofwakanda not really it's incredible.

    • @ganjafi59
      @ganjafi59 4 года назад

      RYAN HUNT RAJPUT if you have money any land is beautiful

  • @pierregabory8772
    @pierregabory8772 4 года назад +8

    Brits becoming french? Hilarious.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад

      Not getting a bath will save the environment.

    • @hotshot8365
      @hotshot8365 4 года назад

      Don’t worry, they are sort that give up and run away at any hint of hardship. Not proper brits.

    • @hotshot8365
      @hotshot8365 4 года назад

      Diarmaid O'Riordan Britain is doing what is hard but right, time will tell.

    • @hotshot8365
      @hotshot8365 4 года назад

      Diarmaid O'Riordan no, 10 - 15 years. Short term pain for 2/3 years but that is coming with a global recession anyway.

    • @hotshot8365
      @hotshot8365 4 года назад

      Diarmaid O'Riordan trade deal with who? Yes I think we will have a few by then, not a comprehensive suit but some. Meanwhile the EU will be struggling with the collapse of Deutsche Bank it’s 43 trillion dollar derivative debt plus all of Italy’s failed banks and the loss of a net contributor. It is going to have increasing disunity from the likes of Hungry and if it really want to hurt itself it will try to punish the UK the UK can as a dynamic sovereign state slash corporation tax and pinch Ireland’s economy.

  • @paologat
    @paologat 4 года назад +6

    You should also consider Italy, where you have a right to be recognized as a citizen if any of your ancestors since 1860 was Italian (provided they did not explicitly renounce their citizenship).

    • @xlite4999
      @xlite4999 4 года назад +1

      Paolo Gatti what if they are all dead?

    • @anthonyfrushour537
      @anthonyfrushour537 4 года назад +1

      xlite doesn’t matter. Citizenship jus sanguinis is passed on at birth, so if the line wasn’t broken then you were born an Italian citizen. I just finished the process and got my passport. It wasn’t cheap for me, however, but the costs depends on several things. How many generations you have to go back, if your documents are foreign (extra-EU), and translations.

    • @chewiella
      @chewiella 4 года назад +1

      if there's other options available i would definitely recommend to steer away from Italian immigration. it takes literal ages... how long did it take you to get it?

    • @anthonyfrushour537
      @anthonyfrushour537 4 года назад +1

      Alexa B that’s not true, in general, with jus sanguinis. JS isn’t naturalization, so it’s not the same. If all goes well you can be recognized as a citizen within 9-18 months. It depends on where you apply, and how many generations you need to go back. And with the prevalence of FB groups and internet forums there is more information out there than ever before. I’m going to recommend the Dual US-Italian Citizenship group, while this group is US-focused, the information is good for everyone and we have members from UK, Canada, Argentina, Brazil, Australia, etc. The documents take 6-12 months to prepare. If you come here to Italy you could be finished in 3-6 months if you have all of your documents ready to go.
      While it did take me almost exactly 3 years, I moved around the US and was bounced around the consulates. Which was why I came here. If I hadn’t come here I’d still be waiting for my appointment in July (Los Angeles consulate) or October (Philadelphia) this year, and then I’d have to wait at least another year to be recognized. However, if you compare that to years ago that’s not terrible. My professor took 15 years to finish his process. But anyway, once I came here I was finished in 4 months. Yes, you need to do you research before you come maybe even come visit and feel out comune you might want to apply in before hand. I did go to Perugia first and it didn’t work out so I went to the comune where my family is from, and where I still have relatives.

    • @clorox1676
      @clorox1676 4 года назад +1

      The problem with Italy is that they are extremely slow to do paperwork and it's more costly, because you need to translate all certificates if they are not European standard. But, yeah, they do extend citizenship rights way further than other countries.

  • @solhsa
    @solhsa 4 года назад +41

    5:55 I have a funny feeling trump isn't going to apply for an irish passport..

    • @Gillemear
      @Gillemear 4 года назад +1

      I think Obama did though

    • @pg205
      @pg205 4 года назад +6

      Incredibly, no one seems to have noticed that!

    • @boylank2
      @boylank2 4 года назад +5

      I spotted that too.

    • @SirRandom
      @SirRandom 4 года назад +7

      @transit journal His mother was Scottish, born in the Outer Hebrides.

    • @bodyloverz30
      @bodyloverz30 4 года назад +2

      @@SirRandom Thus where his golf course is.

  • @colindasilva2442
    @colindasilva2442 Год назад +1

    Good lord , I have a British passport moved to Portugal , work and live without any hassles at all. Just registered at the town hall and done. Really a load of fuss about nothing

  • @fryede
    @fryede 4 года назад +3

    What I really got out of this is that An Roinn Airgeadais picked up a windfall of at least €80m last year.

  • @ekx5120
    @ekx5120 4 года назад +52

    So many Brits are going to fail these language tests :D
    EDIT: OK, these 5 Brits below will be safe and get raptured. You got me. :D

  • @cheetang9494
    @cheetang9494 4 года назад +31

    I’m am a Brit living and born in the UK and want to remain within the EU. Could anyone kindly tell me if it’s possible for me to apply for citizenship in the Netherlands? I lived there for 5 years when I was young, and I can also speak Dutch. Many thanks 🙏🏻

    • @BIGDZ8346
      @BIGDZ8346 4 года назад

      So short answer is I don't really know but my friends been living there for a few years and says it was relatively easy and inexpensive to get it.

    • @j-wtersteege7364
      @j-wtersteege7364 4 года назад +4

      You have to live in the Netherlands for 5 years and then you can apply. If you are an illegal migrant it would be easier (weird but true).

    • @starlinguk
      @starlinguk 4 года назад +2

      Hi! Contact the Dutch embassy in London and they can fill you in. But I think you might not qualify, sadly.

    • @starlinguk
      @starlinguk 4 года назад +35

      @@j-wtersteege7364 only if you're a refugee, not "illegal immigrant". Don't believe everything Baudet tells you.

    • @j-wtersteege7364
      @j-wtersteege7364 4 года назад

      Arya1999 Laatste wat ik las was dat als je zonder paspoort(of je eigen paspoort vernietigd) Nederland in komt en je gaat niet vrijwillig terug naar je eigen land dan krijg je na 5 jaar Nederlanderschap omdat de procedure niet zolang mag duren.

  • @LivDeSantos
    @LivDeSantos 4 года назад +39

    My Mum is Irish and I live in Portugal. Applied for my Irish passport already :D

  • @MartintheMetalhead
    @MartintheMetalhead 4 года назад +1

    Any British citizen has the right to sail across to the Republic of Ireland, live there for 5 years and become Irish. Its an open door.

    • @desmondobrien68
      @desmondobrien68 3 года назад

      Same the other way! THE Common travel area predates the EEC/EU

    • @Martin-tn5lm
      @Martin-tn5lm Год назад

      If you're going Britain to Ireland bring a raincoat.

  • @jwrobin21
    @jwrobin21 3 года назад +2

    So the 1,000,000 people applying for Irish Passports are from the North!
    What a surprise.
    (But The Doc says "NEVER, NEVER, NEVER!"

  • @pg205
    @pg205 4 года назад +5

    I you Brits miss the boat to Irish Passport, try the following:
    1. move to Scotland. They also speak a kind of English.
    2. vote right on the next Referendum. 2nd chances don't come often.
    3. mock the poor lads whom stayed on the wrong side of the border...

  • @olegabbatini7015
    @olegabbatini7015 4 года назад +3

    6:50 Just pointing out a small inaccuracy, but Spain does "allow" dual nationality, just requires foreign citizens becoming Spanish to give up their previous nationality. So this means Brits becoming Spanish will have to renounce their citizenship, but Spaniards living in the UK doing the opposite are allowed dual citizenship, can keep their Spanish nationality and also take up UK citizenship in addition.

  • @Aubury
    @Aubury 4 года назад +9

    I took this route for my children.
    To old and fossilised for me.
    Thank you Ireland. A believer in the EU...

    • @petersimmons3654
      @petersimmons3654 3 года назад

      Ireland 'believes' the EU will keep handing over money. Do you believe in another megastate, the United States of Europe, being a good thing? I don't. It's bureaucracy has already put it's dead fingers round the budget and the EU is striggling financially. A massive gravy train bureacracy that all tax payers have to foot. I noticed during the referendum 'debate' that remoaners didn't have an argument; it was all the scare stories they'd been fed of what would happen, nothing positive, nothing inspiring, and when I made rair, reasoned arguments for leave they were met with insults of racist. That is all remainers could come up with, and it's still the same old whining that leavers want the British Empire back, which is what you were programmed to say. I failed to find an intelligent remainer with an intelligent argument, yet they all sneer as if they are superior. Sadly for them the facts don't back it up. Leavers simply want our country back like the vast majority of sovereign countries in the world who trade with others and don't go to war. The idea that the EU has prevented any wars is laughable. But it has soaked up a lot of our taxes over the decades.

  • @zedtrek
    @zedtrek 4 года назад +1

    I have two passports, British and Italian. Brexit change little for me, I was and I always be European. Fascists can suck it up!

  • @oscarmurphy3441
    @oscarmurphy3441 2 года назад +1

    I feel like it’s not really fair. Everyone in the UK is getting an Irish passport and I would consider the majority are not even Irish. Being Scottish it makes it hard for me with Brexit and everything.

  • @TalysAlankil
    @TalysAlankil 4 года назад +21

    Poland…yeah, if you're LGBT, maybe don't.
    Anyway I gotta love how brexit isn't even complete but brits are already looking to soften the drawbacks of it. brexit for the EU but not for you, I guess?

    • @mrid5850
      @mrid5850 4 года назад +12

      I think these brits were never really a fan of brexit to begin with...

    • @theMoporter
      @theMoporter 4 года назад +9

      @@mrid5850 Half the country is vehemently against Brexit.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад

      uildanach2010 Loser.

    • @Kartissa
      @Kartissa 4 года назад +4

      British tabloids have been misinforming people about the EU for decades. It's not surprising that when the vote actually happened, most of those who participated were woefully ignorant of the facts.

    • @Kartissa
      @Kartissa 4 года назад

      A lot of people *DO* follow the tabloid press. Compared to the various broadsheets, tabloid newspapers have 4 or 5 times the circulation. And that's just based on units sold, never mind the ones that are left lying around in hairdressers, offices, cafes, etc. that people pick up and glance through while waiting for whatever they're there for.
      As for 'get over it,' I have *NEVER* campaigned to try and "fix" the result of the referendum in a way that suits my viewpoint (other than voting Labour last month, but Corbyn *did* promise a Brexit deal that the UK public could vote on). Yes, I think the UK is better as a member of the EU, because I believe that the EU has done more to help this country than it has to hinder it. But the government invoked Article 50, so I accept that.
      It won't stop me voicing my opinion (which isn't illegal yet), or pointing out lies where I see them.

  • @realhawaii5o
    @realhawaii5o 4 года назад +11

    The EU could potentially just decide to create a nice program so UK nationals could migrate to the EU and get nationality if they stayed in the EU.

    • @jadoei13
      @jadoei13 4 года назад +1

      @Ri Ver I'd argue that they're likely to be highly educated and productive people, otherwise they probably wouldn't bother. If that's true, I wouldn't mind accepting them

    • @swanky_yuropean7514
      @swanky_yuropean7514 4 года назад +1

      Outside EU migration was always in the hands of each individual member country. There is nothing the EU can legislate in that regard.

    • @realhawaii5o
      @realhawaii5o 4 года назад

      @@swanky_yuropean7514 It could be an opt-in thing :P

    • @thegrandmuftiofwakanda
      @thegrandmuftiofwakanda 4 года назад +1

      So you want the EU be able to dictate to its member states who it takes as citizens now? You people are absolutely rabid.

    • @thegrandmuftiofwakanda
      @thegrandmuftiofwakanda 3 года назад

      @Nathan Mcilveen Then why on earth are you "staunchly pro EU"?

  • @ronan7695
    @ronan7695 3 года назад +5

    "It is unlikely anyone has a parent born after 2005..."
    Sweeeeet Home Alabama......where the skies are so blue....

  • @Simonsvids
    @Simonsvids 4 года назад +2

    Sturgeon stated anyone living in Scotland when it becomes independent will get Scottish citizenship, Scotland will then apply to join the EU. I'm moving into a bedsit in Glasgow.

    • @molybdomancer195
      @molybdomancer195 4 года назад

      I'm hoping they'll allow citizenship by descent too. My father was Scottish

  • @blameyourself4489
    @blameyourself4489 4 года назад +2

    Farage applied for German citizenship. So much for Brexshit.

    • @granville7
      @granville7 4 года назад

      Did he really? Doubtful. His wife is German and his kids probably too but that's about it.

  • @alvaroludolf
    @alvaroludolf 4 года назад +13

    Technically British people can do just like the rest of the world and apply for a work or student visa... Even a blue card visa after the brexit is done.

  • @Kramlets
    @Kramlets 4 года назад +14

    The high frequency hissing is present in this video too. Please fix it.

    • @JAmediaUK
      @JAmediaUK 4 года назад

      No. There is no hiss. I am listening on studio reference monitors. Any hiss is being generated on your hardware.

    • @JAmediaUK
      @JAmediaUK 4 года назад

      @Feminism Is Toxic Femininity I hope your hearing improves.

  • @cjreeve79
    @cjreeve79 4 года назад +11

    I discovered that I had inherited German citizenship and I recently got a German passport and ID card. Thanks Germany! 🇩🇪 😍 🇪🇺
    I'll wait to see how things go in London but am ready to hop on a 🚲 and ⛴ to find greener 🌄 😁

    • @lint7914
      @lint7914 4 года назад

      I got denied German citizenship because my great-grandfather who was born there did not register with the nearest German consulate within 10 years of moving out of Germany so he was deemed to have lost his citizenship.

    • @jpw6893
      @jpw6893 4 года назад

      Off you pop, stay long enough and you lose your rights in the UK to vote, get benefits etc.

    • @cjreeve79
      @cjreeve79 4 года назад

      @@jpw6893 benefits? Hopefully I won't have an accident and lose my job but I can always take out insurance if the EU country I'm in does not have a good a good welfare system.

    • @cjreeve79
      @cjreeve79 3 года назад

      @Nathan Mcilveen I think you missed my point. I'm a British citizen with a British passport. Now I have a German passport too. I can go wherever I want 🤣

  • @rpwood934
    @rpwood934 4 года назад +1

    Okay, for the avoidance of doubt, these are people living and working in the Republic currently on a British passport. They need to naturalise so that they can continue to live and work in Ireland post freedom of movement. The same is going on with people from all over the EU wishing to stay in the UK. These people are NOT fleeing Brexit nor rushing to join Brexit.
    Nice try TLDR!

  • @bradavon
    @bradavon 3 года назад +1

    You don't have to "become Irish". If your parent was born there you "already are Irish", in the eyes of the Irish state. Me born in England and got my Irish passport in 2017. As soon as Article 50 was triggered. The British passport is worth a lot less these days. I don't even have one at the moment.

  • @AlexNicholls.
    @AlexNicholls. 4 года назад +4

    I've lived in the EU outside of the UK since 2014 but in two different countries so havn't quite got the required residency time for either country and will likely have to go back to the UK where I haven't been for years and have no life there, also my job doesn't even exist in the UK so I'd have to do some unskilled work and retrain which sucks at this point in my career. There should be just an EU citizenship without a nation attached.

  • @AJ_real
    @AJ_real 4 года назад +5

    Yes I am also an Irish man, someone marry me. Hi UK girls!
    *cue UK girls telling me to f off. Haha

  • @Blackmetal699
    @Blackmetal699 4 года назад +8

    I would be really interested in a video on how to become a UK citizen post Brexit, but that's probably all up in the air right now.
    I am currently living in South Africa and have Portugese Citizenship, but I'm yet to complete my studies. So Brexit is really a few years too early for me if I wanted to go to the UK to work as a clinical psychologist.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад

      Find out if your qualification is recognised by BPS, British psychology society.
      It will be easier to get it recognised if you are still studying.
      If it isn’t, don’t worry. It doesn’t have to be but it is better if it is.
      I just looked it up.

    • @Blackmetal699
      @Blackmetal699 4 года назад

      @Astir01 One things for sure, there is no shortage of people who need mental healthcare. No matter where you are in the world.

    • @kieranb892
      @kieranb892 4 года назад

      So many people have degrees in psychology in the uk. They end being managers in small supermarkets.

    • @mrmagoo-i2l
      @mrmagoo-i2l 4 года назад

      Kieran B Clinical is a different kettle of fish.

    • @alexanderboehmler6451
      @alexanderboehmler6451 День назад

      Why would you go to the UK? You can go to Ireland as an EU citizen. Or to the Netherlands (Dutch is almost the same as Afrikaans).

  • @rtsharlotte
    @rtsharlotte 4 года назад +2

    Ireland and the UK have a post Brexit agreement. Even in the event of a no deal the freedom to travel and work in both countries will still be honored. This is because of The Good Friday Agreement and both governments want to protect it. Naturalisation is straight forward in Ireland and only costs €1000 plus solicitor fees

    • @rtsharlotte
      @rtsharlotte 3 года назад +2

      @Nathan Mcilveen It was reinforced because of the Good Friday Agreement and was done to show that both countries are committed to it. Your right there's always been an agreement between the two countries but if the Good Friday Agreement didn't exist there wouldn't of be a common travel agreement between the to countries because the EU wouldn't allow it.
      I never said I had the right to Irish citizenship based on my residency I said "naturalisation is straight forward" which it is!
      I'm in the final phase of citizenship so I know what I'm talking about here and what the other requirements are. Basically live in Ireland for five years, keep your head down paying taxes and make sure you keep three different copies of utility bills over five different years in the last ten and your very much there. You also have to provide bank statements, tax records, 3x pay slips, character references, birth certificate, temporally surrender your current passport, and a police certificate from your home country.
      The justice department has sent me a letter stating that all of my documents have been cleared and there's no requests for any more documents. They don't just reject because you might have forgotten something they actually tell you what's missing and if there's any issues with the ones you've sent. Unless I do something really stupid right now I would gain citizenship. It really is that straight forward.

  • @thorin1045
    @thorin1045 4 года назад +2

    History between Ireland and UK is complicated: As in the UK conquered and subjugated Ireland for centuries and reaped the benefit of this, and left Ireland noting. Really complicated. If you are from the current UK, and want to get an Irish passport or avoid your histories less than nice parts. Otherwise very simple.

    • @thorin1045
      @thorin1045 4 года назад

      @Sassy The Sasquatch Would you accept the same for slavery? Or for Holocaust? or any other massacre and issue happened before 1950 or at least before 1920? Ireland Gained full independence in 1922, less than 100 years ago, so no, some directly involved may still alive, and the direct descendant of both sides is still very much alive, one as queen of one side... the not united Ireland was solved as an actual conflict where people died not more than twenty years ago. it is not some ancient history, where both side gone independent centuries ago.

  • @warrenstewart507
    @warrenstewart507 4 года назад +3

    I have a British and Irish passport due to being born in Northern Ireland 🇬🇧

    • @appleslover
      @appleslover 4 года назад

      I wonder what people from northern Ireland call themselves?
      Irish or British?

    • @SM-ly5tf
      @SM-ly5tf 3 года назад

      @@appleslover we r brits

    • @appleslover
      @appleslover 3 года назад +2

      @@SM-ly5tf but you live on the island of Ireland not the island of Britain

    • @SM-ly5tf
      @SM-ly5tf 3 года назад

      @@appleslover But we grew up doing british GCSEs and A-levels, watching british TV, going to study in british univerisities, benefitting from british social welfare and british NHS and much much more. We may not be from the Island of britain, but we certainly are british. This does not mean we forget our irish hertiage, it will always be a part of us, but we will always be culturally 'brits'

    • @Martin-tn5lm
      @Martin-tn5lm Год назад +1

      I'm from the south of Ireland and I have a "Unionist" friend from Northern Ireland who has an Irish Passport - but his Parents nor Grandfather know he has it.

  • @liamolaoghaire
    @liamolaoghaire 4 года назад +8

    I’m actually the opposite haha, I’m Irish but have an English parent so I’m applying for UK citizenship

    • @jackieblue1267
      @jackieblue1267 4 года назад +5

      Irish citizens still have the same rights in the UK so you really don't need UK citizenship.

    • @vi6144
      @vi6144 4 года назад +1

      @@jackieblue1267 You might have heard of that thing called "Brexit" maybe ? It's going to change that. That's why so many people on both side are applying for dual citizenship.

    • @stepheng3334
      @stepheng3334 4 года назад +8

      @@vi6144 you might have heard a thing called the Common Travel Area, Irish or British Citizen's can freely move and vote etc in each other's countries. .

    • @jackieblue1267
      @jackieblue1267 4 года назад +4

      @@vi6144 As Stephen G has pointed out it is not going to change for Irish citizens in the UK or British citizens in Ireland even with Brexit which is why an Irish person won't need a British passport.

    • @andrewm9221
      @andrewm9221 4 года назад

      Welcome friend! England is very happy to have you!

  • @foxyboiiyt3332
    @foxyboiiyt3332 4 года назад +3

    You can become an irish Citizen if you can answer this easy question: Who's bringing the horse to France?

  • @garychesters6994
    @garychesters6994 3 года назад +1

    Your video is misleading 900,000 people applied for Irish passport in 2019 of which 94,000 were UK citizens so it's not largely due to Brits applying

  • @ekx5120
    @ekx5120 4 года назад +1

    My former boss is English, moved here 40 years ago, married a French lady, had three kids, born here, so they are automatically French, he's worked here for 35 years or so. He applied to become a French citizen long before Brexit, it still took him about 4 years and several meetings, appeals, to get it. So it was that easy back then. A few months later, the Brexit referendum. But he wasn't a migrant anymore! He laughed so hard.
    Basically, if you can speak decent French, and you know our symbols, etc, everyone has a chance. Just be patient, cause the administration here won't be :D