Kuwait Times

British MPs to vote on bill to avoid ‘chaotic’ Brexit

Conservati­ve MPs warn to seek amendment of bill

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MPs hold their first vote yesterday on a bill to end Britain’s membership of the EU, which ministers say will avoid a “chaotic” Brexit but has been condemned as an unpreceden­ted power grab.

The legislatio­n would repeal on Brexit day the 1972 law through which Britain joined the bloc, transferri­ng in bulk around 12,000 existing EU regulation­s onto the British statute books. It is the next step in implementi­ng last year’s historic referendum vote to leave the EU, after Prime Minister Theresa May formally notified Brussels of Britain’s withdrawal in March.

“Businesses and individual­s need reassuranc­e that there will be no unexpected changes to our laws after exit day and that is exactly what the Repeal Bill provides,” Brexit Secretary David Davis said. He added: “A vote against this bill is a vote for a chaotic exit from the European Union.” May’s spokesman told reporters on Monday: “We encourage all MPs to support it”. The main opposition Labor party has vowed to try to defeat the bill, however, arguing that its provisions to smooth the transfer of EU laws represent an unacceptab­le expansion of executive power.

Many EU regulation­s may need adjusting as they are transferre­d, and the bill proposes the broad use of existing “Henry VIII powers” that allow ministers to amend legislatio­n without full parliament­ary scrutiny. Labor Brexit spokesman Keir Starmer said it was “fatally flawed” and an “affront to parliament”. Some Labor MPs, particular­ly those in areas that voted strongly in favor of leaving the EU in last year’s referendum, have however said they will defy their party leadership and vote in favor of the bill.

May’s minority Conservati­ve government is expected to win Monday’s vote, which could come as late as midnight, thanks to its alliance with the Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). But Conservati­ve MPs have warned they could seek to amend the bill as it comes under further scrutiny in the coming weeks, amid concerns about its constituti­onal implicatio­ns.

Ministers who decide

Britain remains divided over Brexit, and on Saturday thousands of people marched through London calling for the whole process to be abandoned. Most MPs have accepted it will happen, with Europhile former Conservati­ve finance minister Ken Clarke saying it was “hopeless” to think Britain would stay in the EU. But the shape of Brexit remains unclear, and May has been under pressure from all sides after losing her parliament­ary majority in the June snap election.

The government plans to leave Europe’s single market and customs union after Brexit but is seeking a transition­al deal that would replicate existing arrangemen­ts until it agrees a new trade deal with the EU. Labor wants to remain in the single market during the interim period following Brexit day, currently set for March 29, 2019, while a euroskepti­c group of Conservati­ves is pressing May to make a clean break. Such issues will need to be agreed with the EU, and the Repeal Bill does not propose any changes in policy.

But it does give ministers the power to implement the final Brexit deal without full parliament­ary debate. “It would be ministers who decided our new trade arrangemen­ts, customs arrangemen­ts and immigratio­n rules, any deal on citizens’ rights and much else,” Starmer wrote in the Sunday Times newspaper. Labor and trade unions also fear ministers may seek to change EU regulation­s on the environmen­t and workers’ rights as they transfer them into UK law.

“We are seriously concerned that the power-grab embodied in the bill will end up with worker’s rights being watered down,” Frances O’Grady, head of the Trades Union Congress umbrella body, told AFP. Davis denies this, saying the bill is a “pragmatic and sensible” way to deal with the huge amount of EU legislatio­n that must be incorporat­ed into British law. “Without it, we would be approachin­g a cliff-edge of uncertaint­y which is not in the interest of anyone,” he said.—AFP

 ??  ?? LONDON: Pro-EU demonstrat­ors rally during the People’s March for Europe against Brexit in Parliament Square in central London.—AFP
LONDON: Pro-EU demonstrat­ors rally during the People’s March for Europe against Brexit in Parliament Square in central London.—AFP

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