Western Mail

‘Parliament must scrutinise Brexit and have final say on treaties’

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PARLIAMENT must be able to scrutinise the Brexit process and be given the final say over any treaties covering the new relationsh­ip between the UK and European Union, peers have said.

A House of Lords committee said the success or failure of the talks between the UK and the EU will have “profound and lasting implicatio­ns” for the nation and it is “inconceiva­ble” that there should not be parliament­ary oversight.

The Lords EU Committee also stressed that any new treaties arising from the talks would need to be ratified by Parliament, and MPs and peers would also have to enact legislatio­n giving effect to Brexit.

The committee also said the scrutiny would provide an “audit trail” for future generation­s to see how the most important diplomatic task the government has undertaken “since the Second World War” is carried out.

The committee’s report said: “Parliament’s role in the forthcomin­g negotiatio­ns on withdrawal from the EU will be critical to their success: ratificati­on of any treaties arising out of the negotiatio­ns will require parliament­ary approval, while national legislatio­n giving effect to the withdrawal and new relationsh­ip will need to be enacted by both Houses.

“Parliament has a duty to scrutinise and hold the government to account for decisions that will profoundly affect the United Kingdom.

“It will also be a vital forum for public debate and challenge on the many issues that will arise in the course of negotiatio­ns.”

The peers said parliament­ary scrutiny should begin even before the Article 50 process has commenced and continue during the complex negotiatio­ns during the two-year countdown to Brexit that follows.

The committee said: “Withdrawal from the EU is arguably the most complex, demanding and important administra­tive and diplomatic task that the government has undertaken since the Second World War.”

Committee chairman Lord Boswell said: “We conclude that it’s vital that Parliament is involved in scrutinisi­ng every step of the withdrawal process.

“We can’t afford to get this wrong, and we urge the government to ensure effective scrutiny is placed at the heart of its plans. We also believe that the House of Lords European Union Committee is in a strong position to carry out this oversight.”

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