Yorkshire Post

Peers slapped down for ‘Brexit self-indulgence’

- TOM RICHMOND COMMENT EDITOR Email: tom.richmond@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @OpinionYP

BETTY BOOTHROYD has urged peers to put aside “partisan allegiance­s” to “limit the damage” to Parliament and the national interest over Brexit.

The former Commons Speaker said she could not recall “a comparable crisis of such prolonged intensity and danger to the national interest”.

She gave the 100th speech in a marathon two-day Lords debate on the European Union (Withdrawal) Bill which intends to give the Government sweeping powers to transfer EU rules into British law.

Though the Dewsbury-born peer urged colleagues to use their “entire arsenal of our powers and prerogativ­es”, she also launched a sideswipe at Tory Ministers and MPs who are underminin­g Theresa May, the Prime Minister.

“Let us put aside partisan allegiance­s on this issue,” said Britain’s first female Speaker.

“Nothing less than the nation’s future is now at stake and that is surely more important than veiled threats to the leadership of a divided party and a possible change of government that would start the process all over again. This is no time for self-indulgence.”

Defending the right of the Lords to challenge the Government’s authority, Baroness Boothroyd said: “In my book, parliament­ary democracy has always meant that parties that win elections or referendum­s do not take all the spoils of victory. They may call the tune, but they are not in the divine position of writing every note of the score. In a democracy, winners do not take all. In my experience, reflection and wellconsid­ered second thoughts oil the wheels of a liberal state and a free society.

“If Parliament does its job in making this Bill and the legislatio­n that follows in the coming months fit for purpose, I see no reason for a second referendum.”

On the continuing fallout from the June 2016 referendum that saw Britain vote to leave the EU, Baroness Boothroyd, a Remain supporter, observed: “I am all the more bemused now to find that it is the winning side that is blowing a fuse because of the confusion that its victory has created.

“Confusion inside government, in industry and commerce, in the City of London, in the European Union and across the wider world.

“I do not recall a comparable crisis of such prolonged intensity and danger to the national interest and the country’s future as a United Kingdom.”

 ??  ?? BETTY BOOTHROYD: Urged Peers to put aside partisan allegiance­s over Brexit.
BETTY BOOTHROYD: Urged Peers to put aside partisan allegiance­s over Brexit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom