Arab Times

Queen lays out Johnson’s Brexit plans

UK monarch formally opens new Parliament session

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LONDON, Dec 19, (AP): Queen Elizabeth II formally opened a new session of Britain’s Parliament on Thursday, with a speech laying out Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s plans to use his commanding majority take Britain out of the European Union and shake up the country’s public services.

Johnson’s Conservati­ve Party won an 80-strong majority in the 650-seat house in last week’s election on a pledge to “get Brexit done” by leaving the European Union on Jan 31, and a broad promise to end years of public spending austerity.

Now Johnson has to turn his election pledges into political reality.

The Queen’s Speech – written by the government but read out by the monarch from atop a golden throne in the House of Lords – rattled through several dozen bills that the government plans to pass in the coming year.

The first will be Johnson’s Withdrawal Agreement Bill, the law needed to make Brexit a reality. It must become law before Jan – 31 if Johnson is to stick to his timetable, and the government plans to hold the first significan­t vote on it Friday.

The bill commits Britain to leaving the EU on Jan 31 and to concluding trade talks with the bloc by the end of 2020. Johnson insists he won’t agree to any more delays – a vow that has set off alarm bells among businesses, who fear that means the country will face a “no-deal” Brexit at the start of 2021.

Trade experts and EU officials say striking a free trade deal within 11 months will be a struggle. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Wednesday called the timetable “extremely challengin­g.”

The government also plans to pass several other Brexit-related measures, including a new immigratio­n system that will be introduced after Brexit, when EU citizens will lose the automatic right to live and work in the UK, and new structures for agricultur­e and fishing.

Reform

Johnson also promised “an ambitious program of domestic reform,” including a law committing the government to spend more on the National Health Service, which has struggled to keep up with growing demand during a decadelong funding squeeze by previous Conservati­ve government­s.

There were tough-sounding announceme­nts on law and order, including longer sentences for people convicted of terrorist offenses and other serious crimes.

Several of the measures are likely to prove contentiou­s. The government plans to set up a “Constituti­on, Democracy and Rights Commission” that could lead to reform of the Supreme Court. The court angered the government by ruling in September that Johnson’s decision to suspend Parliament was illegal.

The government also intends to pass a law protecting military veterans from “vexatious” prosecutio­ns. The question of whether veterans who served decades ago in Northern Ireland should be open to war crimes prosecutio­n is hugely controvers­ial.

Johnson also promised to lessen regional inequality and bring greater unity to the United Kingdom, which is made up of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. But Brexit is making that more difficult. Scotland voted to remain in the EU in Britain’s 2016 referendum, and last week most Scottish seats in Parliament were won by the Scottish National Party, which opposes Brexit and wants Scotland to become independen­t of the U.K.

SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon says that means Scotland should be able to hold a vote on independen­ce, an option Scots rejected in a 2014 referendum that was billed as a “once in a generation” event.

Sturgeon said Thursday she had formally written to the prime minister requesting the power to hold a new independen­ce vote.

“The alternativ­e is a future that we have rejected being imposed upon us,” Sturgeon said in Edinburgh. “Scotland made it very clear last week it does not want a Tory government led by Boris Johnson taking us out of the European Union.”

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