The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Lords could foil Johnson’s Brexit plans

- DAN O’DONOGHUE

Boris Johnson’s plan to flout internatio­nal law over Brexit could be foiled by the House of Lords in a crunch vote next month.

Peers are preparing to vote overwhelmi­ngly to throw out six clauses from the Internal Market Bill, which ministers have admitted will break Britain’s divorce agreement signed with Brussels last year.

Shadow attorney general Charlie Falconer said there was now“very strong support” among peers for kicking the legislatio­n back to the Commons.

Lord Falcon er, who served as Tony Blair’ s justice secretary, said the Bill would do untold damage to Britain ’s standing in the world and to the UK’s devolution settlement.

He said: “This Bill trashes the UK’s reputation for abiding by the law and it promotes divisions between the four parts of the United Kingdom. It is a terrible Bill.”

He added : “The government operates in a way that indicates they don’t care about the law, they see the law as an inconvenie­nce, they act as if they’re too clever for the law.

“They do not know the damage they are doing to the way the country works. If you can’t trust the law, who’s going to trust us? Are the citizens of this country going to trust the government if they don’t care about the law?”

The Labour peer also argued the Bill “undermines devolution” as many powers that would normally be devolved are being reserved at Westminste­r.

His comments came as Scotland’ s teaching watchdog warned the Bill could also impact on educationa­l standards.

Ken Muir, the chief executive and registrar of the General Teaching Council for Scotland, said his organisati­on “would seem to be expected to give full registrati­on to teachers from any of the jurisdicti­ons in the UK, irrespecti­ve if they are highly qualified or unqualifie­d”.

The UK Government has disputed the claims, saying they are inaccurate and incorrect. A spokesman said that the body would still be able to retain and set its own standards for new teacher registrati­ons.

Peers will continue their line-by-line scrutiny of the Bill until a crunch vote set for November 9, when the Lords will either accept the legislatio­n or send it back to MPs for further considerat­ion.

Meanwhile, Michael Gove has berated Nicola Sturgeon’s government for not sharing informatio­n on Scotland’s readiness for Brexit.

The Cabinet Office minister said, in a letter to constituti­onal relations secretary Mike Russell: “I note that despite intensifie­d engagement, UK Government ministers and officials have not been invited to any operationa­l readiness meetings of the Scottish Government.

“I appreciate that is your decision but we still lack access to crucial data.”

His letter came after Mr Russell described communicat­ion with the Scottish Government as “sporadic and dysfunctio­nal”.

 ??  ?? CRITICISM: Michael Gove has hit out at the Scottish Government for not sharing data.
CRITICISM: Michael Gove has hit out at the Scottish Government for not sharing data.

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