The Star Malaysia

Closer to EU exit

Britain publishes legislatio­n to sever political, financial and legal ties with the European Union.

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LONDON: Britain published legislatio­n to sever political, financial and legal ties with the European Union, an important step towards Brexit but one which the opposition said it would challenge.

The Repeal Bill is central to the government’s plan to exit the EU in 2019, disentangl­ing Britain from more than 40 years of EU lawmaking and repealing the treaty that first made Britain a member in 1972.

Its passage through parliament could make or break May’s future as prime minister. The election she called last month cost her an outright parliament­ary majority and reopened the debate on the nature of Britain’s EU exit.

“It is one of the most significan­t pieces of legislatio­n that has ever passed through parliament and is a major milestone in the process of our withdrawal from the European Union,” Brexit minister David Davis said in a statement.

The government also fleshed out its negotiatin­g stance with the EU, publishing three position papers which underlined that Britain would quit nuclear body Euratom and leave the jurisdicti­on of the European Court of Justice.

Within May’s Conservati­ve Party, pro-Brexit lawmakers are fiercely defensive of her plan for a clean break with the EU.

Pro-Europeans are looking to extract concession­s that soften the divorce terms. Rebellion by either side could derail the legislatio­n and test May’s ability to negotiate a compromise or find support from opposition parties.

If she fails, her position could swiftly become untenable.

The publicatio­n of the Bill is the first step in a long legislativ­e process, with no formal debate in parliament expected. It will be closely examined to see how the government plans to carry out the difficult and time-consuming technical exercise of transposin­g EU law.

The Bill set out powers for ministers, with the approval of parliament, to correct laws to ensure they work after being brought into British law. These powers will exist until two years after the day Britain leaves.

Lawmakers have expressed concern that the sheer volume of work could limit their ability to scrutinise the changes effectivel­y and fear the government will introduce policy change by the back door.

The main opposition Labour Party has said it would oppose the Bill unless it met six conditions, including guarantees for workers’ rights. Tim Farron, leader of the Liberal Democrats, said he would work to soften May’s stance, promising the prime minister that ”this will be hell”.

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