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Len Port - Expats in UK and EU equally worried

4801As the formal process of removing Britain from the European Union gets underway this week, two parallel surveys highlighting expatriate concerns show consensus between respondents regardless of their nationality and whether they are living in the UK or in the remainder of the EU.

Overall, 80% of the 1,900 respondents in the surveys conducted by the interactive platform Expat.com agreed that Brexit posed “a threat” for the UK.

When asked if Brexit had affected their daily life, 38% of British expatriates said it had already had a “significant” impact, while 22% said that so far it had made only a “slight” change.

The same questions put to EU expatriates living in the UK yielded similar results.

The nature of the questions in the surveys allowed respondents to express emotions. According to researchers, “an alarming number” acknowledged that the decision to leave the EU was impacting on their mental health.

Respondents spoke of stress and depression due to the unpredictable nature of the Brexit negotiations, and anxiety over how the outcome may affect their careers and the education of their children.

Around 12% of expatriates living in the UK reported experiencing or witnessing some form of racism. A further 8% revealed that they now feel unwelcome as a result of the ‘leave’ referendum.

“Some people make nasty comments about me as an immigrant, accusing me of taking a job from the British,” said one respondent.

“I had my car vandalised six times in the months before the vote. I was fired from my job afterwards,” said another.

“They see us as second-class citizens,” insisted a futher EU national.

Some Britons abroad spoke of a change of attitude towards them, as well as a sense of embarrassment and fear over “rising nationalism in the UK.”

Beyond the Expat.com survey, British government officials say they do not expect the status of expatriates to change during the negotiations over the next two years.

But Prime Minister Theresa May has made it clear that any long-term guarantees to EU nationals in Britain will depend on reciprocal arrangements with the EU member states.

There is much talk of possible complex deals but as of now no one knows if the negotiations will result in any sort of deal at all.

Former Portuguese prime minister and the previous president of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso for one has warned that Brexit is on course to fail unless both Britain and the EU negotiate constructively and are willing to compromise.

Of the four million expatriates involved, it has to be said that the Brits in Portugal and Portuguese in the UK would seem to be less vulnerable than most of the others.

Despite soothing words recently from British and Portuguese officials, there are many worrying uncertainties, though it is hoped that the centuries of close alliance between Portugal and Britain will come into play in the event of a critical breakdown in the Brexit deliberations.

 

https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-h9h-7wxJE1o/WNlDAxRvtkI/AAAAAAAAEYQ/4j2UsMIebiAX3hkfjxv3cnhDZU8tncskQCLcB/s320/EXPAT%2BPROTEST%2BPIC.jpg

 

About Len Port

Len Port has been a journalist for 50 years, working as a staff reporter, broadcaster and freelance correspondent for many leading news organisations. He covered events in the Far East in the Sixties, and in Northern Ireland and South Africa in the Seventies. Since moving to Portugal in the early Eighties, he has edited regional magazines, contributed to national dailies in Britain and written several books.

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Comments  

+1 #8 Sarah Jones 2017-03-30 16:01
Has anybody ever seen a British journalist, particularly those writing for the UK dailies - make any mention of Portugal's dedication of its national anthem to "attacking the Brits". That they have fully grasped its implications and want their readers to do likewise?
Why else has tens of thousands of Brits, who attempted to settle and / or effectively occupy here in Portugal so universally failed?
+1 #7 Peter Booker 2017-03-30 08:41
"The EU negotiate for its entire superstate and the member countries have to kowtow - that's why the UK is leaving."

Another of the reasons that I become depressed about the Brexit argument is the lack of knowledge displayed by the Leavers, much of it founded in the lies of the Brexit Campaign. EU decisions are made by the nations of the EU acting together. No EU community-wide decision is made without the agreement of all. And that fact will apply to the Brexit negotiations.
+1 #6 Chip 2017-03-29 18:47
So this article reports three hysterical reactions from a survey on an obscure website then goes on to say "There is much talk of possible complex deals but as of now no one knows if the negotiations will result in any sort of deal at all.". A non-article, then.

Not sure how Mr Port concludes that "Brits in Portugal and Portuguese in the UK would seem to be less vulnerable than most of the others" as Portugal is not permitted to negotiate anything. The EU negotiate for its entire superstate and the member countries have to kowtow - that's why the UK is leaving.
-2 #5 SueF 2017-03-29 17:02
' No doubt Len is worried about his annual pension increase, but that is down to the UK government, there is no reason they cannot keep paying it, apart from not wanting to fund expats., but nothing to do with EU.'

Sadly, this has everything to do with the EU as it is EU laws that stop the UK government freezing pensions to all those UK expat state pensioners who live in the EU. Pensions are automatically frozen unless there is an agreement in place with an individual country but no new agreements have been entered into since 1981. So with the UK pulling out of the EU pensions can be frozen and, with the likely scramble for savings, they probably will be. You only have to look at the winter fuel payment to see how much the UK government cares for its citizens. Hopefully, the EU negotiators won't want the UK expat pensioners becoming increasingly impoverished.
+1 #4 Margaridaana 2017-03-29 13:41
Len Port worrying himself silly again. As a long term Portuguese resident, surely he must remember how good Portugal was long before the EU struck. Low prices in the markets, high interest rates in one's post office savings account. OK there was no Aldi or Lidl, but we all got by amazingly well. Gas and electricity were cheap, and rates laughable. And as for people having 'mental problems' because of Brexit, get a grip! They may be concerned, but grow up. No doubt Len is worried about his annual pension increase, but that is down to the UK government, there is no reason they cannot keep paying it, apart from not wanting to fund expats., but nothing to do with EU. Also, in the good old days, we always paid for healthcare, as many of us do now. Can't see much to worry about myself. Just pour another glass of red, and remember how much you are saving over the UK price. Of course the majority of expats would have voted against Brexit, number 1 always comes first, but there are also many people in UK, 17 million about, who think differently. It is called Democracy and something we have to live with. How critical were we all in Portugal when EU insisted on second votes in the countries that did not go along with their wishes, how undemocratic it was. Now the boot is on the other foot. Enjoy the sunshine, not much of that in UK.
-1 #3 Peter Booker 2017-03-29 08:53
What I hear of the increasingly overt nationalism and racism in the UK is depressing. It shows a Little Englander mentality, and makes me think of the jingoism which preceded the wars of the 19th and 20th centuries. There has been no war in Western Europe now for 72 years, and a major contributor to the peace has been the EEC and later the EU.

It is no coincidence that the other European politicians who seek to leave the EU are either racist crackpots like Geert Wilders in Holland or crypto-Fascists like Marie Le Pen in France.

I think that there is a European war on the horizon.
+2 #2 Mike Towl 2017-03-29 08:31
Excellent article, look forward to reading more Len Port in The Beano.
+2 #1 CHARLY 2017-03-28 17:10
I know the EU negociater Guy Verhofstad quite well as I used to work with him (in political field) for more than 10 years: as he is not flexible at all I wish the UK negociaters good luck ...

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