Glasgow Times

HOLYROOD TO CLASH WITH UK OVER BILL ON BREXIT

- BY TOM TORRANCE

THE Scottish Government has confirmed it will recommend Holyrood refuse consent for new UK legislatio­n on post- Brexit trading arrangemen­ts – setting itself up for another clash with Westminste­r.

Scottish Constituti­on Secretary Mike Russell said it was a “defining moment” in the relationsh­ip between the SNP government in Edinburgh and Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve administra­tion in London – as he insisted the UK Internal Market Bill should be “stone dead” without the formal backing of MSPs.

The UK Government has introduced the controvers­ial legislatio­n in a bid to ensure trade between the four countries of the UK can continue as before when the Brexit transition period comes to an end.

But with SNP ministers at Holyrood insisting it is a “power grab” on the devolved parliament­s, Constituti­on Secretary Mike Russell said he could not recommend MSPs give it their backing.

With a legislativ­e consent motion due to be voted on early in October, Russell said: “This is a defining moment that will determine both the future of the Scottish Parliament and whether or not the UK can be described as a partnershi­p of equal nations.”

UK Government ministers have already accepted the controvers­ial Bill breaches internatio­nal law, and Russell added it would be “equally outrageous if they decided also to break the constituti­onal convention that the Westminste­r Parliament does not legislate in devolved areas without the consent of the Scottish Parliament”.

Scottish Secretary Alister Jack has said the UK Government plans to press ahead with the legislatio­n – without the backing of the Scottish Parliament if necessary.

But Russell insisted: “The UK’s establishe­d constituti­onal rules mean that the consent of the Scottish Parliament is required for the UK Government’s Internal Market Bill to proceed.

“If the Parliament refuses to grant consent then that should kill the Bill stone dead. It will demonstrat­e beyond all doubt that the UK Government does not believe the UK to be a partnershi­p of equals.”

The legislativ­e consent motion submitted by Russell to the Scottish Parliament states that the Bill “undermines” the existing devolution set up and “explicitly gives UK ministers wide new powers in currently devolved areas of economic support and allows for breaches of internatio­nal law”.

As a result it states: “The Scottish Government cannot therefore recommend support for this Bill.”

While UK ministers argue the Bill will see more powers transferre­d to the devolved administra­tions, with Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove describing it as a “power surge”, Russell added: “This Bill opens the door to a post- Brexit race to the bottom and will mean democratic decisions of the Scottish Parliament on public health, environmen­tal standards, food standards and a range of other key areas can be overridden.”

The Constituti­on Secretary said: “The Scottish Government will ask the Parliament to make a decision on whether to grant consent next month and the memorandum we have published today sets out in detail why we could never recommend the Parliament agrees that its powers should be eroded so fundamenta­lly.”

This Bill opens the door to a post- Brexit race to the bottom

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 ??  ?? Scotland’s Constituti­on Secretary Michael Russell, top, and Scottish Secretary Alister Jack are at odds
Scotland’s Constituti­on Secretary Michael Russell, top, and Scottish Secretary Alister Jack are at odds

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