BRUSSELS — Almost all 3 million European Union citizens currently in the U.K. will be able to continue living there after Brexit, Prime Minister Theresa May promised, saying she wanted to offer them as much certainty as possible about their futures.
May set out the principles with which she plans to approach the question of European citizens in Britain at a dinner for EU leaders during a summit in Brussels. Her office gave an outline of her remarks. The prime minister emphasized that she didn’t want to break up families or deport anyone currently in the U.K.
“The U.K.’s position represents a fair and serious offer,” May said. “One aimed at giving as much certainty as possible to citizens who have settled in the U.K., building careers and lives and contributing so much to our society.”
While the proposal will go a long way toward meeting what EU leaders wanted for their citizens, they’re likely to object to May’s insistence that questions over their rights should be adjudicated in British courts. The U.K. is also leaving open the question of the “cut-off date” from which the rights will no longer apply, saying only that it will be some time between March 29, 2017, when it began the departure process, and the date it actually leaves.