French senator backs campaign for easier visas for second-home owners

feature-image

Play all audios:

Loading...

CAMPAIGNERS ARGUE THAT FRANCE HAS THE FREEDOM TO ACT IF IT CHOOSES TO DO SO Campaigners pushing for France to take action to create more flexibility for British visitors – especially


second-home owners – to spend up to six months here more easily have won support from a senator. Jean-Claude Requier, who heads a group of 14 centrists in the Senate, told the France Visa


Free group that its ideas are “perfectly coherent”. He said he will propose to his group that they add them as an amendment to the immigration bill that is currently going through


parliament. Charente-Maritime senator Corinne Imbert also told _The Connexion_ she will consider doing the same. The bill will be debated by the senators from March 28. The campaigners


believe more should be done to give Britons visiting France comparable freedom to the rules for EU citizens visiting the UK. Since the UK left the EU’s single market, its citizens are


subject to ordinary Schengen area rules on visits from people of non-EU nationalities – including most western democracies – who do not need visas for short-stay visits. They are subject to


a rule of not staying in the area more than 90 days in any 180-day period, looking back from a given day. This contrasts with the UK’s national immigration rules on stays for citizens from


countries such as France, exempt from short-stay visas, which allow a stay of up to six months. EU rules mean staying up to six months a year is possible, but the stays must be spaced out,


spoiling the plans of many British second-home owners who used to spend up to one half of the year in France. Many of them bought homes pre-Brexit under other rules. FRANCE VISA FREE’S


CURRENT REQUESTS TO FRANCE INCLUDE: * Making renewed applications for a temporary long-stay visa entirely online. These visas permit a stay for a set period of up to six months, outside the


90-days rule, but each application must be started from scratch, even if it is for a similar stay at the same second home. This includes taking a lot of paperwork in person to one of three


visa offices in the UK; * Alternatively, introducing a ‘property owners’ visa’ which would allow people to come to France for 180 days a year at the time of their choosing, with the visa’s


validity to last five years; * Or, offering UK nationals a visa-waiver for France to come for six-month periods, similar to the UK’s rules. France Visa Free founder Steven Jolly said:


“Central to our argument is that France has the freedom to act.” He pointed to the fact that France controls its long-stay visa rules and is creating new visas for workers in certain


sectors, such as those lacking staff, in the new immigration bill. UK daily newspaper i said last year that Spain’s tourism secretary had told it he would ask Brussels to relax the 90-day


rule so British holidaymakers can stay indefinitely when they visit. He reportedly said this was something that would have to be changed across the EU. Last year, France’s Foreign Affairs


Ministry said, in answer to a senator: “It is not possible for France to unilaterally grant a derogation of the movement rules adopted at a European level to British citizens.” However, _The


Connexion_ has been told by the Spanish Tourism Ministry that it has had a change of minister since the i report and it is not now pursuing this. It directed us to ask Spain’s Interior


Ministry about the issue, but this ministry also failed to confirm any current support for measures in favour of British visitors. For more on the France Visa Free group, see here. The group


is encouraging supporters to write to other MPs and senators about its ideas. RELATED ARTICLES VISAS TO STAY IN FRANCE FOR SIX MONTHS: Q&AS ON APPOINTMENT PROCESS EXPLAINER: MAKE SENSE


OF SIX-MONTH VISAS FOR FRANCE PLAN TO EASE LAUNCH OF EU ENTRY/EXIT SYSTEM WITH APP PRE-REGISTRATION