The Jerusalem Post

Britain targets how to convert EU law into legal certainty in preparatio­n of Brexit

- • By WILLIAM JAMES

LONDON (Reuters) – The British government set out on Thursday to figure out how it will handle the mammoth task of converting European Union laws into domestic legislatio­n in preparatio­n for its exit from the bloc, seeking to ease business uncertaint­y about life after Brexit.

Prime Minister Theresa May formally notified Brussels on Wednesday of Britain’s intention to leave the EU after more than 40 years of membership. In that time, tens of thousands of EU-related laws have made their way onto the British statute book, governing almost everything from farming to finance.

Her ministers laid out how they intend to unpick that complex legislativ­e web by initially converting the entire body of EU law into British law – a step seen as necessary to ensure continuity for businesses trading across EU borders.

The plan centers around a “great repeal bill” due to be laid before Parliament in May. The bill will transpose EU law, repeal the 1972 European Communitie­s Act which formalizes Britain’s EU membership, and give ministers the power to change existing laws to make sure they work after Brexit.

“The bill will convert EU law into United Kingdom law, allowing businesses to continue operating knowing the rules have not changed overnight, and providing fairness to individual­s, whose rights and obligation­s will not be subject to sudden change,” Brexit minister David Davis told Parliament.

Analysis by Thomson Reuters says 52,741 laws have been introduced in the UK as a result of EU legislatio­n since 1990, and research published by Parliament estimates 13.2% of UK primary and secondary legislatio­n enacted between 1993 and 2004 was EU-related.

Davis said the European Court of Justice would have no future role in interpreti­ng British laws, but that courts would be able to reference ECJ case law.

The bill is expected to be subject to close scrutiny, with companies saying they cannot plan without knowing what comes after Brexit, forcing them to put investment programs on hold and delaying major infrastruc­ture projects.

Drugmakers are concerned that Brexit will mean the UK leaves the EU-wide European Medicines Agency, forcing the creation of a separate British system for drug approvals. That will mean more red tape and could delay new medicines reaching Britain.

The government’s proposals did not specifical­ly address such concerns, which are echoed in other industries such as finance and aviation where firms worry that leaving the EU will mean quitting the regulatory bodies that authorize them to trade.

Aides said membership of EU agencies would be a matter for May’s negotiatio­n.

The plan also raised hackles among some politician­s who fear the government will use the Brexit process to reshape EU laws without proper parliament­ary scrutiny as they move them into British law.

The Liberal Democrats called it a “shameless power grab.”

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