The Borneo Post

UK Parliament to restart Brexit bill debate next month

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LONDON: British lawmakers will renew debate over landmark legislatio­n on exiting the EU in parliament next month, following a brief delay in the contentiou­s draft law, the government confirmed yesterday.

Andrea Leadsom, leader of the House of Commons, announced members of a parliament­ary committee would begin two days of deliberati­ons on the European Union (Withdrawal) Bill — known as the repeal bill — on November 14.

The crucial legislatio­n, which puts existing EU regulation­s on the domestic statute book in a bid to avoid legal chaos after Brexit, returns after accusation­s the British government was attempting to delay debate on the bill.

It appeared stal led a f ter attracting nearly 400 tabled amendments — including a number proposed by members of Prime Minister Theresa May’s own ruling Conservati­ve party — amid concerns over an excessive expansion of executive power.

Britain’s main opposition Labour Party earlier this month accused the government of slowing the process to avoid damaging defeats on the draft law, while its Brexit strategy was paralysed.

A spokespers­on for the Department for Exiting the EU said yesterday the government was looking at the amendments “with the utmost seriousnes­s.”

“We look forward to continuing the debate and working with Parliament to ensure that we deliver a functionin­g statute book on exit day,” the statement added.

The repeal bill, which has a guaranteed eight days of debate at committee stage, is scheduled to return after a short parliament­ary recess in early November.

The announceme­nt came as politician­s also argued for parliament to have a “meaningful” final say on Britain’s final exit deal before leaving the bloc on March 29, 2019.

Lawmakers, including Conservati­ve former attorney general Dominic Grieve, have tabled amendments to the repeal bill requiring parliament to vote on any withdrawal agreement.

Senior Conservati­ve party lawmaker Nicky Morgan said yesterday they are “deadly serious” about backing the plans for a final say. — AFP

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