The Irony 2....
#16
Account Closed
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 26,319
Re: The Irony 2....
Here's a further response to your previous question. There are plenty of other articles in different news outlets.
Brexiteer living in Spain made to return to UK over deportation fears and people have little sympathy
Last edited by DaveLovesDee; Mar 28th 2021 at 11:19 pm.
#19
Re: The Irony 2....
#20
Re: The Irony 2....
#21
Re: The Irony 2....
People had four years to become legal. If they left it too late they can't stay, if they were illegal they can't stay, if they don't meet the criteria for living Spain they can't stay...it ain't rocket science.
The little video attached seems appropriate
The little video attached seems appropriate
#24
BE Forum Addict
Joined: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,153
Re: The Irony 2....
Why would it? Covid started to affect trade in March 2020, not at the start of this year.
#25
Banned
Joined: Mar 2021
Posts: 538
Re: The Irony 2....
https://www.internationalinvestment....uk-expats-exit
Another media report on the 90/180 day rule for expats in Spain
Another media report on the 90/180 day rule for expats in Spain
#28
BE Enthusiast
Joined: Mar 2019
Posts: 871
Re: The Irony 2....
Is that why you are getting an Irish passport, so you can side step the Brexit nasties and move to Spain?
#29
Banned
Joined: Mar 2021
Posts: 538
Re: The Irony 2....
Yes, last Friday night in Spain....
Just pop into your local corner shop, get a few tins and the party continues after the pubs close!!!
What pandemic???
#30
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Joined: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,153
Re: The Irony 2....
'We've been sold a dud': small firms suffer decline in post-Brexit exports
Mike Cherry, the FSB’s national chairman, said smaller businesses faced “incredibly demanding, unfamiliar paperwork”.
He added: “Three months on from the end of the transition period, what we hoped would prove to be teething problems are in danger of becoming permanent, systemic ones.
“While larger firms have the resources and bandwidth to overcome them regardless, smaller traders are struggling and considering whether exports are worth the effort any more.”
Mike Cherry, the FSB’s national chairman, said smaller businesses faced “incredibly demanding, unfamiliar paperwork”.
He added: “Three months on from the end of the transition period, what we hoped would prove to be teething problems are in danger of becoming permanent, systemic ones.
“While larger firms have the resources and bandwidth to overcome them regardless, smaller traders are struggling and considering whether exports are worth the effort any more.”