Well, France also has the choice, they too can leave the EU and take back control.
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Gambatte, the referendum date is irrelevant. Any legal change to immigration status will have an enactment date and non-UK travellers will have a passport date to prove when they arrived.
Disclosure: I would very much prefer the UK remains in the EU
But that items seems reasonable to me, example:
A USA citizen living in France in dispute with the French government about a matter of EU law can go to ECJ (who enact EU laws as set by the EU of which France is a member).
A USA citizen living in France in dispute with the French government about a matter of French specific law can go to one of the French supreme courts (who enact French laws as set by the French government).
A French citizen living in the USA in dispute with the USA government goes to the supreme court of the USA.
I don't see how that is different to your example Patrick and I think it would be unreasonable for either side to argue about it.
From Wikipedia:
"The ECJ is the highest court of the European Union in matters of Union law, but not national law. It is not possible to appeal the decisions of national courts to the ECJ, but rather national courts refer questions of EU law to the ECJ."
Someone would only be able to appeal an argument with the UK government to the ECJ if it was a matter of EU law interpretation (same as now), of course if the UK leaves the EU, I don't think EU law could still apply in the UK.
(of course I'd like the UK to remain in the EU)
At 11pm local time on March 29 2019, the UK is scheduled to leave the bloc.
What are you looking forward to most post us not being part of the bloc?
A welcome end to all this diatribe.