Am also looking at plan "J" - (we're down to that letter now) where to go if things go south and it becomes necessary for the Daughter to leave the UK.
You have the Tier 4 visa and maybe the Tier 2 visa too.
It's too early to call it yet and they might let everyone stay if the UK follows the German model. Germany has managed to keep the numbers in their country at the same level for years.
Since the UK did the, ‘don’t come for what you can take, but instead for what you can bring’ bit, massive changes have been brought in/are coming in.
By looking at what benefits those who aren’t British or weren’t British when they arrived in the UK are taking and ending or changing those, other countries benefits are now more attractive from this year. Most planned from 2008/9 and slowly winding their way through Parliament to make new laws, long before the Leave vote last year.
The NHS is toast and has been for the last couple of decades. The “cradle to grave” model only works if you stick to the 'everyone paying their 40/50 years of working taxes to the UK' and keeping net immigration numbers low. The UK stuck to a 50,000 net migration limit for many decades, up to about the mid 90s.
But in about 2003, the NHS was thrown into a severe financial crisis. Instead of dealing with the problem by making tough changes, or better still doing this before there was a financial crises for the health service as other countries did, the then government at the time played 'kick the can down the road' by bringing in PFIs for 5% of the entire NHS! By doing this they made some private firms very rich, and still are, while throwing the NHS into ever growing, multi billions of debts for the decades still to come-
2012
Blair defends PFI as NHS trusts face bankruptcy
Tony Blair has defended the spread of private finance initiatives under Labour as seven NHS trusts face administration as they struggle to repay large debts from PFI deals. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/news/9356942/Blair-defends-PFI-as-NHS-trusts-face-bankruptcy.htmlOver 5 million more people in the UK now and less people paying taxes than there was 10 years ago, Brits know changes will have to come in for the NHS, and soon. A lot of people already have private insurance now and some employers offer that as a perk with the job.
Better benefits in other EEA countries now from this year and changes needed for the NHS, I wouldn’t rule out being able to stay on Brexit as numbers should dwindle.
Too bad Ireland won't let her in. (That is especially galling since the law that defined the effective date of my citizenship changed one week before she was born - had she been born two weeks earlier, she'd have an Irish passport right now).
Ireland has quite high unemployment. They are also one of the countries that did act to protect their healthcare system. It's something like 60 Euros for a doctors appointment, 100E for a trip to A&E. Children over age 5 to be paid for too, unless their family only earns below 14K. No free prescriptions, but capped at 140E per month. It's also insurance based and private insurance is needed too. There is more Irish living in England than there are in Ireland.
However, if Ireland is where you want to be, once your daughter has citizenship from another EEA country via you exercising your treaty rights there for at least 5 + years, she can then go to Ireland to exercise her own treaty rights. Then get Irish citizenship after exercising treaty rights there for 5+ years. With citizenship, she can then always live in Ireland.
Germany is appealing, but not likely - I don't think they'd let her in.
It’s the same way you were able to bring her to the UK. Germany can’t stop you taking your Direct Family Members to Germany to live, just so long as you are being a qualified person at all times in their country.