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8 year oldBrexit officially won out, with 52 per cent of voters opting to leave against the 48 per cent who wanted to remain in the EU, and the result will impact not just those living in the motherland, but Aussies too.
While Australians with the good fortune of boasting British passports would no doubt have been shocked by today’s referendum, life might not be a whole lot different for them just yet.
Living and working in Britain will be as easy as it was before Brexit for those with UK passports and ancestry visas — nothing will change.
Additionally, those wanting to travel to Europe on holiday will still be able to because Aussies and Brits are able to visit much of continental Europe without visas in the first place, so crossing borders will still be relatively easy.
“Leaving the EU would have no impact on these passports or visas. Those who apply for the working holiday open to those aged up to 31 would also not be affected,” managing director of relocation specialists 1st Contact Sam Hopwood told the Financial Review.
“The suggestion that the governments of Spain, Greece, Portugal, etc would single out Brits for tougher treatment at the border is far-fetched. We will simply continue to show our passports on arrival, as we do now — as the UK is outside the Schengen Area,” The Independent’s Simon Calder wrote.
UK passports — emblazoned with “European Union” on the cover — will also likely remain valid until their date of expiration. Passports are issued by the British government and not the EU, so re-applying for new documents immediately is unlikely to be necessary at this stage.Newer articles
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