Brexit
Britons rushed for EU passports in #Brexit vote year - data
The number of Britons becoming citizens of another EU country more than doubled in 2016, data showed, and more than quadrupled in Germany in a development Berlin put down to Brexit, write Alastair Macdonald and Samantha Koester in Brussels.
In the year Britons voted to quit the European Union, 6,555 of them acquired citizenship in another of the bloc’s states, up 165% from 2,478 in 2015, statistics office Eurostat said on Monday (9 April).
Of those, 2,702 became German, up 355%. Officials said at the time the German data were released that it seemed to be linked to Brexit.
Belgium, where thousands of Britons hold jobs in Brussels that may depend on their being EU citizens, granted passports to 506 of them in 2016, four times as many as in 2015.
Eurostat data show a steadily rising trend in Britons becoming nationals of other EU states over the past decade, with the 2016 figure more than four times higher than in 2007.
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