No. free movement of labour across EU borders is a fundamental right in the EU.
If you are EU citizen from one country to another EU country, you pay tax, which vary from one EU country to another.
No. Different countries in the EU have different legal systems, so what happens in each country does not necessarily have any signficance in another EU country.
"Can a non-EU citizen travel to any EU countries with any EU country residence permit?'' Anyone with a Swiss residence permit can travel freely throughout the Schengen Area, which is most, but not all, of the EU. You may only travel as a tourist, if you want to live permanently or work in another country and are not an EU citizen then you will need a permit from that country.
No country has to pay to join the European Union. However, countries are obliged to pay taxes to the European Union, which causes them to tax their own citizens.
No, because Andorra is not in the EU. The smallest country in the EU is Malta.
Not usually. As the EU is a customs Union, mail sent from one country to another does not have to be inspected by customs.
No new country joined the EU in 1999.
Mallorca is part of Spain, wich is in the EU.
The EU is not a country. It is an organisation. It has 28 independent countries as members.
Yes, many parents live in one country and pay for their children living in another.
There is no country called Sami in the EU
The main 5 aims of the EU and what they are trying to achieve: trade, free movement, to give justice, equality, greener Europe/environmentally friendly.