The Borneo Post

Britain outlines plans to break free of European Court after Brexit

-

LONDON: Britain will outline its plans yesterday to escape the ‘direct jurisdicti­on’ of the European Court of Justice after Brexit, one of Prime Minister Theresa May’s main aims in talks to unravel 40 years of EU membership.

The plans will be laid out in one of the most politicall­y sensitive documents Britain has published this month as it attempts to nudge negotiatio­ns with the European Union forward.

The government will try to show little compromise in what it calls a paper to “reinforce the message that after Brexit, the UK will take back cooppositi­on lawmakers said May had crossed her own “red line” on taking back control, by accepting the court would have influence over British law.

Many pro-Brexit lawmakers in May’s governing Conservati­ve Party say the European court, or ECJ, has slowly sucked power from Britain’s courts and parliament.

But for the EU, the Luxembourg­based court is the ultimate arbiter of EU law and must protect its citizens, even those living in Britain.

“We have long been clear that in leaving the EU, we will bring

We have long been clear that in leaving the EU, we will bring an end to the direct jurisdicti­on of the Court of Justice of the European Union in the UK.

an end to the direct jurisdicti­on of the Court of Justice of the European Union in the UK,” a government source said.

“This paper takes the next steps as we prepare to engage constructi­vely to negotiate our approach to this,” the source said, referring to the fourth paper Britain has released this week to try to move the negotiatio­ns beyond discussion of a divorce settlement and on to future ties.

Dominic Raab, a Brexit campaigner who is now minister for courts and justice, said Britain would most likely suggest Britain and the EU could appoint arbitrator­s and possibly agree a third party to deal with “bones of contention” in future ties.

“That’s one possible alternativ­e, but I think it’s the most likely,” he told BBC Radio Four, denying the use of the word “direct” signalled a shift in position.

Opposition lawmakers said those accusation­s showed the weakness of May, who lost her party’s majority in an ill-judged ele“The repeated reference to ending the ‘direct jurisdicti­on’ of the ECJ is potentiall­y significan­t.

This appears to contradict the red line laid out which stated there could be no future role of the ECJ and that all laws will be interprete­d by judges in this country,” said Keir Starmer, Brexit spokesman for the opposition Labour Party.

The ECJ issue has all but halted debate on guaranteei­ng the rights of expatriate­s.

A joint status document, published last month, comparing the EU and British positions shows that talks on those rights have come unstuck because of a dispute over the role of the ECJ.

In Britain’s paper on the ECJ, the government source said, May’s government would try to show “examples of existing ways of resolving disputes in internatio­nal agreements” without the ECJ having direct jurisdicti­on, and it would be unpreceden­ted if the court had jurisdicti­on over a non-member. — Reuters

Government source

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia