Brexit: UK-EU Security (EUC Report) Motion to Take Note 7.02
pm Moved by Baroness Prashar That this
House takes note of the Report from the European Union Committee
Brexit: future UK–EU security and police cooperation (7th Report,
HL Paper 77). Baroness Prashar (CB) My Lords, it is a
real...Request free trial
Brexit: UK-EU Security (EUC Report)
Motion to Take Note
7.02 pm
Moved by
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That this House takes note of the Report from the European
Union Committee Brexit: future UK–EU security and police
cooperation (7th Report, HL Paper 77).
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(CB)
My Lords, it is a real pleasure to open this evening’s
debate, and I am grateful to the noble Lords who will
contribute to it. We often talk about bringing expertise to
bear when we explain what this House has to offer. That
expertise will be very much in evidence this evening when
we hear from a number of former practitioners, including:
two former commissioners and a former deputy assistant
commissioner of the Metropolitan Police; former Home Office
Ministers and advisers; former Members of the European
Parliament; a former justice of the Supreme Court and my
distinguished predecessor, the noble Lord, Lord Hannay. I
thank the members of my sub-committee and its excellent
clerk, Julia Labeta, for their hard work and commitment in
ensuring that the report was produced in time for
consideration.
In their White Paper The United Kingdom’s Exit from and New
Partnership with the European Union, the Government
emphasise that,
“The safety of the UK public is the top priority”,
and that must be right. It is also why we chose to look at
police and security co-operation as the first of our
Brexit-related inquiries and explore the options available
to the Government for retaining or replacing them when the
UK leaves the European Union. We wanted to make a
constructive contribution to the development of the UK’s
negotiating position and inform both parliamentary and
public debate.
In view of the importance that the Government attach to the
security and police co-operation aspects of the UK’s
withdrawal from the European Union, we were very struck by
the fact that in the referendum campaign these had not
received the attention they deserved from either side. It
is tempting to regard this as a technical subject that can
be left to the practitioners. The evidence we heard during
our inquiry left no room for doubt that the European Union
tools and institutions used by our law enforcement agencies
are integral to the day-to-day work of police forces and
prosecutors up and down the country. What is more, the
nature of the threats we face, particularly from terrorism,
has made cross-border co-operation essential. Our own
country’s security is enhanced by living in a secure
neighbourhood, and we will therefore always have an
interest in the internal security policies of our nearest
neighbours, even after we leave the European Union, and
they in ours.
On the whole, that point is well understood, but it appears
to have led to a slight sense of complacency, not
necessarily by the Government, and certainly not by the
practitioners from whom we heard, but in public debate
about how negotiations on this aspect of our future
relationship with the European Union will unfold. There
seems to be a sense that, because the UK and the EU 27
share a strong mutual interest in sustaining police and
security co-operation, a positive outcome is inevitable.
However, having examined the practicalities of arriving at
that positive outcome, we were not quite so sanguine, and
for that reason I was not surprised to see the Government’s
White Paper listing,
“the way in which we cooperate on criminal … justice
matters”,
among areas where a phased process of implementation may be
required.
The vital thing to bear in mind is that, when it comes to
police and criminal justice measures, we have already been
through a mini-Brexit. The UK exercised its block opt-out
of pre-Lisbon police and criminal justice measures in 2014,
and then rejoined a smaller subset of 35 measures. As noble
Lords who took part in the scrutiny of and debate on that
exercise will recall, each of those measures was thoroughly
assessed, including in the two Command Papers published by
the Government as part of that process. The 35 measures we
opted back into were judged to be in the national interest,
and deemed “vital” by the then Home Secretary, now the
Prime Minister, in order to,
“stop foreign criminals from coming to Britain, deal with
European fighters coming back from Syria, stop British
criminals evading justice abroad, prevent foreign criminals
evading justice by hiding here, and get foreign criminals
out of our prisons”.
Since the Lisbon treaty came into force, we have chosen to
opt into some 30 further police and criminal justice
measures, each individually assessed on their merits,
including the passenger name record directive, the Prüm
decisions, and the European investigation order.
Although the inquiry’s mission was to look for
opportunities and risks from Brexit, we had to conclude
that, in this area, we were mainly looking at risks. This
was because, in contrast to other policy areas and as a
result of the UK’s justice and home affairs opt-out, each
of the measures that the UK participates in was, by
definition, the subject of a positive decision and
assessment when the country first joined—or rejoined—it,
and those assessments were unlikely to have changed in the
few intervening years. The word “suboptimal” came up time
and again when witnesses described the options for future
arrangements.
Our inquiry looked at the main tools and institutions that
underpin our police security co-operation with the European
Union, and there was a clear consensus among our witnesses
on the measures they would like to see retained or
adequately replaced. Europol, Eurojust, the
second-generation Schengen information system, the European
arrest warrant, the European criminal records information
system and the passenger name record were consistently
listed as top priorities. Broadly speaking, measures fell
into two categories: those where there were precedents for
securing access to those tools or to credible substitutes
from outside the EU, and those where no such precedents
exist, or where the precedents that do exist would not be
sufficient to meet the UK’s operational needs.
Europol fell into this latter category. Our witnesses made
clear that an operational agreement with Europol akin to
those that other third countries have negotiated would not
be sufficient to meet the UK’s needs. We therefore
concluded that the Government will need to devise, and
secure agreement for, an arrangement that protects the
capabilities upon which UK law enforcement has come to
rely, and goes further than the operational agreements with
Europol that other third countries have been able to reach
thus far. While our report was in preparation, a bespoke
arrangement was agreed for Denmark. I would be grateful if
the Minister could tell us more about that arrangement and
how relevant it may be to the UK’s future needs.
On Eurojust, we judged that the third-country agreements
that exist, particularly those which involve liaison
prosecutors, may come closer to meeting the UK’s needs than
the precedents for third-country agreements with Europol.
That is not to say that a lift-and-shift model would
suffice, since any such agreement would ideally provide for
closer co-operation than has thus far been available to
other third countries—for example, by providing access to
the Eurojust case management system. We were concerned that
the role of the supranational EU institutions in providing
accountability and oversight of the activities of Europol
and Eurojust could present a political obstacle to forging
the sort of operational partnership that might otherwise be
advantageous to both the UK and the EU 27. I hope that the
noble Lord, Lord Kirkhope, may be able to say more about
that, as his evidence on this point was particularly
helpful.
On data sharing for law enforcement, we were concerned to
find that the two data-sharing tools that witnesses
identified as the top priorities for the UK—the Schengen
information system and the European Criminal Records
Information System—were also those for which there is no
precedent for access by non-European Union or non-Schengen
countries. The law enforcement community was emphatic about
how absolutely vital those tools were to its work. The
National Crime Agency described the Schengen information
system as,
“an absolute game-changer for the UK”.
We did, however, accept the Government’s argument that the
starting point for the UK in seeking to negotiate access to
these tools was different from that of any other third
country because of the UK’s pre-existing relationship with
the EU 27 and the data it has to offer. Therefore, we
consequently recommended that the UK should seek access to
the full suite of data-sharing tools on which it currently
relies, as well as those it is still planning for, while
recognising that this would be a particularly ambitious
objective.
Will the Minister clarify the remarks of the Secretary of
State for Exiting the European Union in the other place
last Thursday, when he appeared to imply that the UK would
withdraw from the Prüm decisions after we leave the EU? Are
the Government saying that they will not seek continued
access to Prüm after we leave, even though both Houses
voted in favour of UK participation, on their
recommendation, barely a year ago?
I turn to the European arrest warrant. We saw no reason to
revise our assessment, and that of the Government in 2014,
that the 1957 Council of Europe Convention on Extradition
could not adequately substitute for the European arrest
warrant. We therefore concluded that the most promising
precedent for the Government to pursue would be to follow
the precedent set by Norway and Iceland and seek a
bilateral extradition agreement with the EU that mirrors
the European arrest warrant’s provisions as far as
possible. However, we were discouraged to see how long it
had taken to negotiate and implement that agreement.
Therefore, the European arrest warrant may well be a
candidate for an interim arrangement, bearing in mind that
we cannot afford an operational gap.
We received less evidence on the other criminal justice
measures, and in any event could not examine them in the
same level of detail. It is, however, reassuring that the
Justice Select Committee in the House of Commons has
launched an in-depth inquiry into the criminal justice
measures. The lesson we did take away was that some of the
lower-profile criminal justice measures complement the
higher-profile ones—for example, the European supervision
order helps to mitigate some of the less satisfactory
aspects of the European arrest warrant. Therefore, the
Government need to be mindful of the risk that
relinquishing less well-known measures could undermine the
effectiveness of tools that are higher up in the list of
priorities.
During the course of our inquiry, some overarching themes
emerged. One was a real sense of achievement, sometimes
tinged with sadness, when looking back at the UK’s record
in helping to build and shape the EU’s institutions,
policies and practice in this area. Major components of the
current landscape, from Europol to the passenger name
record directive, reflect the UK’s influence and agenda
setting. The Government will therefore need to examine what
structures and channels they need to remain part of, or
adequately replace, if they are to continue to influence
the EU’s security agenda in the future.
The second theme that emerged was the tension between two
of the Government’s objectives—that is, withdrawing from
the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice and
maintaining strong security co-operation with the European
Union. It seemed to us that, even with the utmost good will
on both sides, there would in practice be limits to how
closely the UK and the EU 27 could work together if they
were no longer accountable to, and subject to oversight and
adjudication by, the same supranational European Union
institutions, especially the European court.
A third theme to run through much of the evidence was the
need to meet EU data protection standards to be able to
exchange data for law enforcement purposes with European
partners after we leave the EU. At the point of exit, when
we have identical standards, this may not be such a
problem, but over time the UK can expect to have to keep up
with standards that it no longer has any role in framing or
influencing. More generally, the police and criminal
justice measures that the UK is currently part of, and may
continue to have a stake in, are liable to be amended and
updated with the passage of time when the UK is no longer
at the table to influence the pace and direction of change.
We recommended that the Government should explore from the
outset how any agreement reached with the EU 27 at the
point of exit could address this prospect.
With reference to the last two points, noble Lords will
have seen that the Government’s White Paper devotes quite a
bit of attention to dispute resolution mechanisms and the
Government’s intention to seek,
“a new approach to interpretation and dispute resolution
with the EU”.
There clearly are precedents for adjudication mechanisms
and international arbitration in trade agreements, but it
is not clear that arrangements along those lines would
address the issue that the committee raised about the link
between deep police and security co-operation—for example,
the ability to search each other’s police databases—and a
common framework for oversight and accountability, such as
that currently provided by the supranational EU
institutions. Could the Minister tell us more about how the
Government see the link and what implications it might have
for the level of co-operation we can sustain in future?
I also invite the Minister to tell us a little more about
what she expects to be negotiated as part of the withdrawal
agreement and what would be part of discussions on the
framework for a future relationship. For example, one might
assume that extracting the UK from agencies such as Europol
and Eurojust would be part of a withdrawal agreement, but
could she shed some light on what other aspects of the
current arrangements would fall within the scope of Article
50 narrowly construed?
Finally, the Government’s White Paper mentions the great
repeal Bill and the Government’s intention that,
“wherever practical and appropriate, the same rules and
laws will apply on the day after we leave the EU as they
did before”.
Could the Minister please explain how she envisages the
process of converting EU law into domestic law working in
the area of police and criminal justice?
I look forward to the Minister’s reply and to the
contributions of noble Lords.
7.19 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, I am delighted to be the first speaker after the
noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, as it gives me the
opportunity to be the first to congratulate her and her
committee on this important report. Having had both the
honour and the pleasure of serving on the Home Affairs
Sub-Committee of the European Union Select Committee for
two years under her chairmanship, I can attest to her
skills in this capacity. She manages to pull together a
diverse group of Members drawn from all parts of this
House, each with firmly held views of their own, and to
persuade them all to affix their signatures to a single
document tackling a complex and sometimes highly
politically charged topic with limited—although
excellent—staff support and in a relatively short time.
This in itself is quite an achievement. Even more
impressively, she manages to do this gently, patiently and
with good humour.
This report is a good example of a Prashar production. It
is clear, concise and comprehensive. It provides your
Lordships and the world beyond these walls with an
extraordinarily useful supply of material on one of the
most important subjects facing our country at this time.
Speaking of time, however, if there is one word I would not
use in describing this report, it is “timely”. For me, as a
declared remainer, the report is about 12 months late. I am
not saying that I believe the result of the referendum
would have been different had this report appeared in
December 2015, rather than December 2016. I do not think
the electorate were in any mood to take notice of what the
House of Lords had to say on this or any other subject,
particularly on one which might call into question the
benefits of “taking back our country”. But they should at
least have had an opportunity to consider the matters
discussed in this document and to think in a slightly more
informed way about some of the possible consequences for
the safety of their communities of voting to leave the
European Union.
The sad truth is that most of the points made in this
report about the value of EU institutions in the policing
and justice field received little or no attention during
the referendum campaign. How often did any of the leading
figures on the remain side mention Europol or Eurojust, the
EU information systems such as ECRIS, the second generation
Schengen information system, Prüm and the passenger names
records, or valuable EU criminal justice tools such as the
European arrest warrant, the European investigation order
and the European supervision order? As I said, I doubt that
discussing these institutions and systems would have made a
jot of difference to the outcome of the referendum. But
should not the electorate have at least been aware of the
role these institutions and systems play in keeping them
safe, and the risks our leading policing experts believe we
run in losing them?
Take Europol, for example. Should not the electorate have
known that the country’s leading law enforcement
professionals believe unequivocally that this organisation,
headed by one of our own nationals, is a “critical
priority” in keeping us safe? Or that the DPP believes that
Eurojust is “essential” to the effectiveness of the Crown
Prosecution Service? Or that access to the information and
intelligence currently sourced through the EU’s
data-sharing mechanisms is seen as,
“mission critical in protecting … the citizens of the UK”?
Or that access to the second generation Schengen
information system is described, as the noble Baroness
said, as “an absolute game-changer” by our National Crime
Agency, which said that access to it by UK police forces,
“is essential for mainstream policing … to safeguard the
welfare of people across the country”?
Or that the European Criminal Records Information
System—ECRIS—which most people have never heard of, is
“critical to volume policing” and that not having access to
it would present,
“an ongoing risk to the UK”?
Or that the passenger name record is,
“incredibly important for the security of our border”,
that the European arrest warrant is “absolutely vital”, and
that any period without it or a delay in replacing it would
pose an “unacceptable risk”?
I very much regret that it took this report, available only
in December 2016, long after the referendum votes were
counted, to set out clearly in one place all these expert
evaluations of the EU’s law enforcement and public safety
arrangements and how they affect us day to day. However,
there is no point looking back. What about the future? How
worried should we be about the consequences for community
safety of leaving the EU?
The first point is that the EU’s role in community safety,
while important, is limited. As this report states in its
very helpful summary, many of the EU measures the UK is now
due to leave were deemed vital by the then Home Secretary
in order to,
“stop foreign criminals from coming to Britain, deal with
European fighters coming back from Syria, stop British
criminals evading justice abroad, prevent foreign criminals
evading justice by hiding here, and get foreign criminals
out of our prisons”.
These are indeed major threats to the safety of our
communities. But let us not forget that they are only a
small part of the threats we face in our day-to-day lives,
and tackling them represents only a small part of the work
of our police.
It is worth remembering that 1,732 individuals—men, women
and children—died on our roads in 2015 and a similar number
are likely to die in traffic accidents this year and next.
Let us not forget the many victims of serious domestic
violence or the victims of the intolerable anti-social
behaviour that blights so many of our cities, towns and
villages. All these threats affect our communities each day
and will continue to do so whether or not we are in the EU.
Our police will still be expected to deal with them, and
although Europol and Eurojust are not irrelevant to these
threats, their contribution is marginal. I wanted to put
that on the record. It is important not to overestimate the
dangers to our community safety from leaving the EU with
regard to the various institutions we shall be discussing.
However, having said that, let us get back to the EU and
its contribution. On this I am generally optimistic about
the future, because I share the Government’s view that we
will be able to negotiate new arrangements with the 27 EU
members that will be at least as good as those we have now.
I believe that we will continue to participate in Europol
and Eurojust and to use the various information systems
which we played such a critical role in creating. I say
this not because I am, on the whole, an optimist but
because I accept the Government’s view, restated in their
latest White Paper, Cm 9417, that:
“The safety of the UK public is the top priority for the
Government”.
I note with much pleasure that the report we are debating
today appears to take the same line. In paragraph 8 of its
summary and conclusions, it quotes the Government’s
statement in 2014 that they would,
“never put politics before the protection of the British
public”.
The report states that in the committee’s view, this
calculation has not changed. I very much agree.
I also believe strongly that the Governments of our 27 EU
neighbours share this view. For these countries, and
especially for France, Germany and Belgium after their
recent experience, the safety of their citizens from
international serious and organised crime and terrorism
will remain such an overwhelming priority that I am sure
they will ensure that Brexit does not put them at risk.
Here again, I am delighted to be able to quote the support
of this report:
“The UK and the EU-27 share a strong mutual interest in
ensuring that there is no diminution in the level of safety
and security afforded to their citizens after the UK leaves
the EU”.
More importantly, I believe that our Government and the
Governments of our EU neighbours understand also that
serious and organised crime and terrorism cannot be tackled
by national states on their own. Those who indulge in such
activity do not recognise national borders, so dealing with
them effectively must be approached internationally. That
is why we and our EU partners developed Europol, Eurojust,
the European arrest warrant and the various EU information
systems. It is not in anyone’s interest, other than that of
serious and organised criminals and terrorists, to damage
or weaken these institutions and systems. I am sure that
our policing professionals and their European colleagues
will not let that happen. As the report concludes,
“there is considerable consensus among … law enforcement
agencies on the … tools and capabilities they would like to
see retained or adequately replaced”.
For me, this is the real reason for optimism.
Having spent most of my career working with police
professionals, I have complete confidence that they will do
everything they can to keep us safe. That is why I was so
pleased when they spoke out so strongly when giving
evidence to the committee. I believe that this is only the
beginning of their engagement in this matter. Why did they
not speak up earlier? I think because, like many of us,
they did not believe that the British people would vote to
leave. Why would they? From where the police sit, leaving
the EU meant losing important weapons in the fight against
crime. But now our police professionals are fully aware
that the time has come to fight to preserve the
institutions and systems they worked so hard to build. They
are not going to walk away from this fight, police
professionals never do—they run towards danger, not away
from it.
Some will no doubt say, and this report gives them some
justification for doing so, that this is wishful thinking.
In the real world of hard political bargaining, such
cross-border co-operation and new agreements are difficult,
if not impossible, to achieve. Even where they are
achievable, past experience has shown that forging such
agreements takes a very long time, thus exposing us to
dangers in the meantime. There is no doubt that experience
in these matters is not encouraging; or to put it the way
the report does, there are no precedents for believing that
forging agreements will be easy or quick. Having served in
the Home Office as an official for 27 years, I am very
familiar with the arguments made based on precedents or
lack of them. But I feel that anyone living today in the
world of Brexit and President Trump knows that when it
comes to judging the future on the basis of the past, all
bets are off.
My faith is that our policing professionals and their
European colleagues will come to our rescue. The police
pride themselves on “getting things done”. As I said
earlier, they will rise to the challenge—I am prepared to
bet on it. That is why I welcomed this inquiry and welcome
this report. It gave our police professionals a legitimate
opportunity to speak out on issues which have hitherto been
addressed mainly by politicians. I knew they would rise to
this challenge and they have justified my faith in them. I
am confident they will do so again.
7.32 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I start by commending the noble Baroness, Lady
Prashar, for the quality of her chairmanship of this
committee and for engaging fully with everyone. I also
thank the staff of the committee, who also did an extremely
good job. I want to say at the beginning that I welcome the
very recent change in the language of the Government,
particularly in Malta. For the first time, I heard members
of the Government say rather more forcefully than they had
in the past that we must have a very close, positive
relationship with Europe.
My view is that the referendum has happened and there is no
going back on it in the foreseeable future. Therefore, we
have to make it work for both the United Kingdom and the
European Union. Failure to do so will have severe
consequences for everyone. The noble Lord, , who has a lot of
experience of this from his work in the Home Office, knows
that many of the things that will happen as a result of
Brexit will not be fully understood by the British public
because the information was not put before them. I
understand that, but I agree with him that the outcome
would not have been different had it been put before them.
He pointed out that people might have thought differently
had they known the implications for the security side of
things, but I remind him that if politics were rational,
frankly, we would not need politicians. That ought to be an
exam question for anyone who is thinking of doing politics.
We now have a report that gives the Government a way
forward. Security and policing is one of the top four
objectives for the Government, as has already been said. In
my contribution I will focus mainly on what I see as the
most important part of the report. Paragraph 37 talks about
the problem of linking up with the security and policing
work in Europe. It ends by stating:
“This may mean trying to remain part of certain channels
and structures, or finding adequate substitutes”.
For me, that is very important, and it ought to be one of
the negotiating aims of the Government. For all the reasons
given by the noble Lord, , the security of
the people of the United Kingdom and the European Union
will be at risk if the co-operative organisations and
structures that we have now cease to work, and we will all
be in greater danger than we would have been otherwise.
That is why this is so important. It is worth saying that
there are a number of ways of achieving this. I take the
view that it is perfectly possible to work these matters
out and come up with acceptable solutions that work. But it
is not going to be easy and I rather doubt that it will be
quick.
In areas where we have to trade across borders—aerospace,
cars and agriculture are good examples—there must be some
sort of agreement on regulations. One advantage in those
areas is the recent idea of equivalence; even if you do not
follow the regulations precisely, you can have equivalence.
The European Union could look at Britain’s arrangements on
any of these matters and decide that because they are
equivalent to the EU regulations, it can co-operate—and
vice versa. The important difference with security is that
although we can have equivalence in certain areas, there is
the problem that this is about people’s liberty, about
policing mechanisms and about the power of the security
services. That means that the law is involved, and so
everything has to be underpinned by the rule of law. That
adds an important different dimension.
In my view, the primary aim of the Government should be the
creation of new mechanisms for very close co-operation.
Indeed, I have said elsewhere that I think we have to have
a special relationship with the European Union and that we
ought to start talking about it in that way. I visited
Brussels in the middle of the inquiry and it struck me how
many people were sad that we were leaving, but also how
many people were angry. I understand that anger.
Continental Europeans have always seen this as a political
project. The British people have never seen it quite like
that. We have seen it as an economic project. I have made
the point before that for continental Europeans this is a
superstate while for the British it is a supermarket.
We are now going down the road of what the Europeans
rightly call cherry picking: we have picked this and that,
and said we will take part in this but not that. I am
reminded of the depth of the history of British culture in
relation to Europe. It is very much a reflection of Lord
Palmerston’s famous statement, made in the middle of the
19th century. To paraphrase, he said that Britain had no
permanent friends or enemies, only our own interests to
pursue and that it was our duty to pursue them. In a way,
that is why we have ended up going from being the most
popular country in Europe, post 1945, to being probably the
least popular. We are now seen as the bad boy of the class.
A number of the existing arrangements mean that the police
and the security services can talk and act directly
together. That is the message that came through from the
noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, and the noble Lord, . Outside the
European Union, that will not be the same. We will no
longer have a seat at the top table, so we will not be
discussing what the rules should be on all of these areas
for policing and security. Yet, as indicated, they are
vital, so we have to work out how we do that. On leaving
the European Union we become a third country, which
produces a position where there might be arrangements by
international treaty, cross-border agreement, with
individual countries or with the European Union. I do not
need to spell that out in any more detail for noble Lords
to realise the complexity. As I have said already,
equivalence is one way forward on some of these matters,
but it is not the complete answer.
I will give an example. The United Kingdom could apply to
the European Union for adequacy status on data protection,
because data protection affects all our privacy. It often
seems a rather dry topic, but if people are worried about
privacy in their own lives, in business or other areas they
need to worry about data protection. The EU could then
decide if data protection in the United Kingdom was of an
equivalent or adequate status in relation to that practised
within the European Union. If it were, we could have an
agreement that the exchange of data could take place. There
would be safety in doing so. But there is a caveat because,
although that could work, and it is one thing that the
Government ought to be looking at in negotiations, I am not
a lawyer but it occurs to me that if somebody felt that it
was not appropriate in their particular case, they could
challenge it in law. So again I emphasise the seriousness.
But other countries have come up with adequacy arrangements
with the European Union, so that could work.
When I visited the European Parliament during the course of
this inquiry, I had some useful discussions with Members of
the European Parliament, as well was the chairman and
members of the various security committees from all of the
other 27 countries who were present at the meeting. One
thing that we were all concerned about was Europol and the
whole issue of parliamentary scrutiny of the legislation
passed. The European Parliament is now in the process of
setting up what is in effect a rather large—and I suspect
rather too cumbersome in the long run—Select Committee
process for looking at the way that policing and security
is done. We need to be linked into that. We cannot be
members because we will be out of the EU, but we need to be
closely involved in some way.
Our contribution in Brussels is remarkable. The chairman is
Claude Moraes, whom I know well. He is a British Member of
the European Parliament. , the EU Commissioner
for the Security Union, gave evidence to our committee and
is also exceptionally highly regarded. Rob Wainwright is
the director of Europol. He is a British police officer,
again with a high reputation in Europe. All of these people
are doing exceptionally good jobs. All of them will cease
to be members when we leave the European Union.
There was a recent report of an extraordinary meeting of
the conference of committee chairs with Mr Verhofstadt, a
former prime minister of Belgium who is now the European
Parliament’s co-ordinator on Brexit. The notes of the
meeting state:
“Linked to this is the question of the use of the European
Arrest Warrant. UK has always been critical about the EAW.
Entering an alert for arrest … is equivalent to a
provisional request for extradition … It will have to be
discussed whether UK will want to continue”,
with the EAW. If we do, what do we do about the oversight
of the European Court of Justice, because UK officials have
pointed out that the jurisdiction of the European Court of
Justice is a red line and that we will not accept that
court’s jurisdiction? So there is a complex area between
the use of the European arrest warrant and how we resolve
that problem without also putting ourselves in the
situation of being outside the remit of the European Court
of Justice—which I assume we will do, because it is a red
line for the Government. So what other safeguards will we
have? It is a complex area and that report is important.
There will be a limit to how closely we can co-operate if
we do not recognise the European Court of Justice. We need
to recognise that there will be some international treaties
between the UK and the EU. There will have to be some
structures, agreements and adequacy points, which I have
already mentioned, that allow us to continue with the
co-operation. In some ways we will have to rely on
precedence for having access to some of these policing and
security practices. Other countries have done that with
bilateral agreements. The United States has a bilateral
agreement on passenger name records because it regarded
that as particularly important after 9/11. Norway and
Iceland have an agreement on the European arrest warrant.
But again, if we look at that closely, there are problems
with it, so replicating it is probably not the best answer.
I will conclude where I began—by saying that the onus is
now on the Government to negotiate new forms and new ways
of making sure that co-operation between the EU and the UK
continues. It is of such importance. It is not just a
conventional thing in many people’s minds—arresting someone
in Belgium or Germany or vice versa in Britain and sending
them over. There is also the whole question of terrorism
and, as the noble Lord, said, we cannot
solve that problem on a single-nation basis; we have to
have close co-operation. That means exchanging vital
information that will often be of a security nature.
In those circumstances, one thing that the Government will
have to look at in their negotiating procedure is the legal
safeguards. What legal challenges can they expect from
people caught in that system who decide that the Government
of the United Kingdom or the European Union do not have the
legal power to do what they are doing and then challenge it
in the courts? This is where the negotiations are critical.
We will not see how they pan out for a few years yet, but
they are really extremely important.
7.47 pm
-
(LD)
My Lords, I am not sure whether this is declaring an
interest or providing background information, but I was a
police officer in the Metropolitan Police between 1976 and
2007.
I thank the noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, for her
comprehensive introduction to this debate. I welcome this
report and congratulate the committee for isolating what I
consider to be the most important implications for the UK
of leaving the EU in relation to policing and security
co-operation. In addition to reading the report, I have had
the benefit of talking to David Armond, who is leading for
the National Crime Agency on these issues, and to Lynne
Owens, the director-general of the National Crime Agency.
This is where I part company at an early stage with the
noble Lord, . While he is
quite right about the tenacity of police officers and
police professionals to overcome obstacles, my experience
from over 30 years in the Metropolitan Police is that I
would not underestimate the ability of politicians to work
in completely the opposite direction.
As the report concludes, and as the noble Baroness, Lady
Prashar, said, the importance of many of the mechanisms
that enable the UK and the EU to co-operate effectively in
this area cannot be overstated. Some aspects are equally if
not more advantageous to the EU 27 than to the UK, and we
would want such co-operation to continue, but the report
also points out that that is not straightforward. In other
aspects, of course, the UK is the major beneficiary. The UK
uses Europol, for example, more than any other country,
accounting for around 40% of the data flows.
I want to emphasise what I see as some of the major issues
and, as noble Lords would expect, I shall concentrate on
the policing aspects. First, in the past the UK was
instrumental in shaping the nature of police co-operation
and security matters, but it will no longer be able to
exert such influence once it is outside the European Union.
Having spent so long being in control as far as security
and police co-operation are concerned, even if the UK is
allowed to stay on board—over which there is some doubt—it
will no longer be in the driving seat. Interestingly, the
report highlights how the balance between security and
privacy, when it comes to the acquisition and sharing of
intelligence, may tip against the UK without it being able
to influence that. Of course, many on these Benches would
see that as a good thing, because the balance would
inevitably tip in favour of privacy following the passing
last year of the Investigatory Powers Act, but others may
be more concerned.
Secondly, and more worryingly, the UK Government have
stated that they intend to use their strong position on
police and security co-operation as a bargaining counter in
the overall negotiations with the European Union. In a
situation where most commentators believe that everything
should be done to maintain the current level of police and
security co-operation, it is worrying that the Government
might be threatening to reduce or end such co-operation
should the UK not get what it wants in other areas.
The third issue is the necessity for common standards and
adjudication arrangements when it comes to many of the most
valuable EU-wide mechanisms. The essential element of all
these mechanisms is the sharing of information and
intelligence, for which there must be common standards of
data protection, as the noble Lord, , has just mentioned.
The need to meet EU data protection standards is not just
an issue of the UK giving up sovereignty in this area, in
that it will not be able to set its own data protection
standards that fall short of those set by the EU. If in the
future the EU decides to enhance those standards, the UK
will have no say in that decision-making process. There is
a clear trade-off here between UK sovereignty and UK
security, and I hope that the noble Baroness can explain
which of the two will be sacrificed. According to the
report, in 2014 the Government said that they would,
“never put politics before the protection of the British
people”,—[Official Report, Commons, 10/11/14; col. 1224.]
so I am guessing that the UK will abide by EU data
protection law.
Practitioners believe that something very close to full
membership of Europol is essential, but Europol is
accountable to EU institutions, including the European
Court of Justice, and we have just heard from the noble
Lord, , that it looks like
the European Parliament is going to become more heavily
involved in overseeing Europol. But the Government have
made clear that they do not want to be subject to the ECJ.
Can the Minister explain how this will work and tell us how
many other mechanisms such as Eurojust, for example, rely
on the jurisdiction of the ECJ?
There are other issues. There is no precedent for a
non-Schengen, non-EU country to be a member of the second
generation Schengen information system which, among other
things, allows patrol officers in the UK to identify in
real time people wanted under European arrest warrants and
those who are of interest to counterterrorism agencies. The
noble Lord, , talked about
precedents and said that we should not be bound by the fact
that, just because it has not happened in the past it
should not happen in the future, but as the noble Lord,
, said, it takes time
to negotiate alternatives. The report helpfully gives the
example of the extradition arrangements between Norway and
the European Union. Bearing in mind that Norway is within
the Schengen area, there are arguably stronger links
between Norway and the EU than the UK will have after we
leave. The negotiations for that extradition agreement
started in 2001 and were concluded in 2014, and it has
still not come into force. There is a real danger of there
being a considerable gap in capability if we are not very
careful.
No non-European Union country has access to the European
Criminal Records Information System where, as the noble
Lord, , said, the
criminal records of EU nationals are shared between member
states. I am also very concerned that, as the noble
Baroness, Lady Prashar, mentioned, apparently the Secretary
of State for Exiting the European Union has said that we
would no longer be part of the Prüm decisions, which allows
for the very rapid sharing of fingerprints, DNA profiles
and vehicle number plates. Under Prüm, these take between
seconds and a maximum of 24 hours, whereas the National
Crime Agency says that alternative arrangements with other
countries under Interpol take weeks or months, and indeed
some inquiries are never responded to at all. It would be a
very serious matter if the UK withdrew from the Prüm
decisions.
There is little doubt that the Prime Minister’s threat that
she would walk away rather than accept a bad deal from the
EU would have serious consequences if it included no deal
on policing and security co-operation. Coming out of the
single market and the customs union may slow growth in the
economy, but walking away from policing and security
co-operation would pose a serious risk to public safety.
The Prime Minister has said that every aspect of our
relationship with the EU is on the negotiating table.
Perhaps the Minister would like to suggest to the Prime
Minister that she should rethink that. This is one baby
that we should not throw out with the bathwater.
7.57 pm
-
(CB)
My Lords, I have the honour of serving on the EU
Sub-Committee on Home Affairs, so ably chaired by the noble
Baroness, Lady Prashar. She has set out eloquently the main
points in our report. In view of the time and what other
speakers have said, I am not going to go over the same
ground, rather I will try to emphasise from a former police
background what I think are some of the important things we
should be considering.
There are many exciting aspects to leaving the European
Union. It will create exciting opportunities for the
country, but this area is not one of them. Leaving the EU
will open no new doors for police co-operation and it will
create no new opportunities. It does not create space for
us to become a better and bigger global partner in this
area. That is not, I hope, a lack of imagination, resolve
or determination on my part. As the report shows, it is the
result of a forensic examination of the current position
and the prospects as we leave the European Union. The
Government will have to work extremely hard in their
negotiations if there is not going to be a diminution in
the safety and security of our citizens.
I spent quite a lot of the second half of my police career
encouraging and setting up many of the embryonic stages of
police co-operation in Europe, in particular in two posts.
The first was as the chief constable of Kent Police, when I
worked extensively on the planning for the Channel Tunnel
right through from its inception to its completion, as well
as the important establishment of two land frontiers with
France at either end of the tunnel, concentrating on the
juxtaposition of controls and working with European police
forces in a very detailed way. Then, as commissioner for
seven years in London, I encouraged and helped to set up
Europol in the mid-1990s. I saw it through the early years
of its birth, development and establishment.
When I retired in 2000 police co-operation around Europe
was important, but it certainly was not a day-to-day
activity and it did not challenge or get in the way of
day-to-day policing. What we learned from our expert
witnesses was how much has changed in the intervening
time—developments in technology, the internet and mobile
telephony; the threat from asymmetric terrorism and how
terrorism has changed; and the movement of people
throughout and into Europe, with 3 million EU citizens
living in the United Kingdom. Police co-operation
throughout Europe has moved from the nice and important to
the essential day-to-day. That co-operation is woven into
the fabric of day-to-day policing up and down our country.
I hear what the noble Lord, , said about other
threats, but European co-operation, through full membership
of Europol with unhindered access to the various databases,
Schengen II, criminal records, Prüm, passenger name records
and so on, and access to and use of European arrest
warrants, Eurojust and all the other police and justice
infrastructure means that everyday policing up and down the
country relies on these very important relationships,
institutions and databases, whether it is a terrorism
detective in Scotland Yard or the National Crime Agency
working on a sophisticated inquiry to thwart a terrorism
threat, or a young patrol officer in Leeds, Bristol or
Manchester stopping a vehicle and within seconds being able
to check on vehicles, people and property in a way that
only a few years ago would have been unthinkable. As the
noble Lord, , said, things are done
in seconds now that previously took days, weeks, months, or
never got done. We should not underestimate how European
co-operation on policing is, to use a horrible phrase,
mission critical to everyday policing in this country.
I know that the Prime Minister is fully aware of that
importance. As Home Secretary and Prime Minister, whenever
she has spoken about Brexit she has emphasised the
importance of strong and close co-operation. In the debate
in the other place on 18 January about the implications for
police and security, the Police Minister who opened the
debate, the Brexit Minister who closed it and every single
speaker was unanimous about the importance of this subject
and maintaining the closest possible links.
Paragraph 11.7 of the Brexit White Paper sets out
unequivocally that we need strong and close future
co-operation—so far so good in recognising the importance
of the subject. Where I digress slightly from the view of
the noble Lord, , and from the
Government is that I believe there is an overreliance in
government circles on two facts that are constantly prayed
in aid as reasons why we should be optimistic for the
outcome of any negotiations. The first is mutual
dependency. We all want to combat terrorism and serious
crime. We all want to stop paedophiles and cybercrime.
Surely that mutual interest will drive us to find a
solution to these challenges. The second thing, which the
Government constantly state, is that the United Kingdom has
been at the heart of these co-operative arrangements and
designed many of them, leads them and is a major user of
them. The almost unspoken assertion is that the European
Union cannot do without us. I fear there is an element of
complacency that mutual dependency and the fact we are
currently at the heart of these measures will see us
through. The noble Lord, , is right that
police throughout Europe have a can-do mentality and will
want to find a way through this, but there are major
impediments to progress that other noble Lords have already
mentioned.
The first is the jurisdiction of the European Court of
Justice. Police officers in any part of Europe can ruin
people’s lives by their actions. In the most extreme
circumstances they can and do take people’s lives. It is
vital that their actions—acting alone, in collaboration or
on a major operation—are subject to scrutiny and the
highest challenge through political structures, accountable
structures and most certainly through legal structures and
the courts. Europol, the various databases, the
infrastructure for the European arrest warrants and
Eurojust are all quite properly subject to the jurisdiction
of the European Court of Justice and, increasingly, to the
European Parliament, the Commission and its institutions.
We are pulling out of those. We want to be a member of the
policing club with all the benefits, but at the moment we
are saying that we are not going to adhere to or accept the
jurisdiction that there currently is over those important
mechanisms. The second important area, which could be a
major impediment, is data protection standards, which other
noble Lords have already spoken of. At the moment we are
signed up to and quite properly part of the implementation
of those data protection standards, but we will be leaving
the club and our involvement with them.
How should we move forward? Clearly we must find a
satisfactory way through this if we are to protect our
citizens and our good friends in Europe. Section 12 of the
Brexit White Paper talks about avoiding disruptive cliff
edges and the consideration of phasing in the new
arrangements. If ever there was a subject matter that
should rely on those sentiments it is police co-operation
and our membership of the infrastructure that delivers it.
It is in the interest of the United Kingdom, the European
Union and all their citizens that we maintain the status
quo for as long as possible. There is no rush and no rhyme
or reason why we should seek to unscramble or destabilise
these arrangements—quite the reverse. It should be a
government position and, I hope, an EU position that we
should maintain the current infrastructure and the status
quo for as long as possible. If that means being creative
around accepting the jurisdiction of the European Court of
Justice over some of these issues for a period of time, let
us find a way to ensure that that takes place. Anything
less than the status quo will be a diminution of the safety
and security of our citizens. As we move forward, we must
stay in the club on these issues and maintain the status
quo for as long as possible. We know, however, that there
has to be change, and in negotiating and preparing for that
change, the United Kingdom negotiators should willingly
offer progress on three important issues.
First, we must pay a reasonable contribution to Europol and
for the databases and the European arrest warrant and
infrastructures—all of that. Why would we not want to pay
our way? We must make it clear up front that we will pay
reasonable and sensible contributions for all of those
institutions and databases.
Secondly, we should willingly show that we are going to
match or exceed data protection standards. We can easily
make the financial contribution. I say that even though it
is not my money, but we can make that work. Data standards
are something that we can make work relatively easily, and
in recent weeks and months we have worked with the EU and
signed up to four important developments on data
protection: first, a general regulation on data protection
for EU citizens; secondly, a general directive on law
enforcement in the European Union; thirdly, a privacy
shield signed between the European Union and the United
States to enable data sharing primarily commercially
between us; and fourthly, an umbrella agreement signed
between the EU and the United States for law enforcement
purposes. It is that fourth issue—the umbrella agreement
that the EU has signed with the US—that is a model that
will perhaps show us the way forward. We will certainly
have to show that, in terms of data protection standards,
we are matching or exceeding the EU standards that we are
currently signed up to.
Thirdly, the most intractable problem is finding an
acceptable way through once we have shown that we are no
longer subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of
Justice. Other noble Lords have already pointed out that
the White Paper and the Government have accepted that
dispute resolution mechanisms will have to be developed.
That is one area where I currently cannot see a way
forward. However, I am sure that there will be a way
forward; and that when we come out of the jurisdiction of
the European Court of Justice, we will have to show that we
accept there has to be an adequate replacement.
As others have said, voters in the referendum last year did
not really have a chance to consider these issues, but I am
sure that if they had, they would not have wanted to make
it easier for terrorists, paedophiles or serious criminals.
It is in the interests of both the UK and the EU to
maintain the status quo for as long as possible. However,
as we move forward from that, the new arrangements will
mean that we have to pay our way, maintain data protection
and find dispute resolution mechanisms. I am honoured to
serve on the sub-committee. I hope that we have made a
contribution that the Government will find helpful and
that, as we move forward, we will continue to seek ways to
help the Government find a way through this vital topic for
our country.
8.14 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I am very pleased to follow the noble Lords,
and . It was rather like
being on the committee, in the sense that we had a
succession of police officers, some of whom were retired
and some still in harness, so to speak. They come out with
a consistent line, and this was exemplified by the last two
contributions. As a relatively new member of the committee,
I thank the noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, for the way in
which she was able to conduct the business and ensure that
those of us who were the lowest of lay people—if I may put
it that way—were able to follow the proceedings, which were
very intense and helpful, and were greatly assisted by the
clerk and her staff.
As has been said, it would have been helpful if we had been
able to have had a more sensible debate in the course of
the referendum campaign. In fact, one has to say—although
it would, perhaps, not be said from the Benches
opposite—that the Home Secretary at the time could have
played a more significant role in drawing attention to some
of the difficulties that leaving would have. We have now
begun to see some attention being given to them, but I do
not have too much faith in last week’s White Paper wish
list. It has nodded in the direction, but it has not really
given us anything like the kind of response to the points
that have already been made this evening.
It is fair to say that we are beginning to appreciate the
complexity and significance of the EU’s role in security
and police co-operation. This questions the assertion that
we had to leave to secure our borders or to take back
control of our laws and justice, because we see that so
much of what is operating in our system at present is
dependent upon this EU co-operation and will be made that
much more difficult by our leaving. Witnesses repeatedly
provided us with evidence of how much more difficult it
will be to protect ourselves, and indeed our fellow
European citizens, if we do not have full access to the
agencies which our membership of the EU affords. I will
look at two areas where our benefits and influence will be
lost when we leave. These are not areas where the words
“hard” or “soft” Brexit have much relevance. We are dealing
here with not national advantage or for that matter old
score-settling, but simply matters which contribute to the
operation of justice and our mutual security. I shall deal
with Europol and Eurojust.
In 2014 a predecessor EU sub-committee recommended that the
UK opt into what was then the new Europol regulation.
Eventually, before Christmas last year, the Government did
so. This will certainly put us in a better place when we
come to negotiate our exit from the EU. These negotiations
may not be easy as some would imagine, since the UK’s
involvement in Europol is of a greater order than that of
third countries such as the US, Norway and Albania: I do
not put those in any particular order of significance. The
Government has said—it has been quoted already but it bears
repeating—that they would never put politics before the
protection of the British public, but how is this going to
be achieved in the context of the way in which Europol is
moving, as envisaged in the new regulation?
The Government wish to free us from supranational European
institutions, yet the new regulation seeks greater
accountability of Europol, involving the Commission
presence on the management board and a joint parliamentary
scrutiny group involving reps from national parliaments and
the European Parliament. If this is to be the case, and if
we always have the bogey of the European Court of Justice
in the background, so hated by the Brexiteers, UKIP-pers
and the rest—it is difficult in these areas to distinguish
one from another—it will create very great problems when it
comes to getting a deal we can sell to this House and the
other place.
The significance of Europol as a source of information and
intelligence and as a means of co-operation was repeatedly
stressed to us and we were told that these would be
terribly dangerous to lose. Some access is afforded to
countries which are not part of Europol but which enjoy
third-country or third-party status. There are two forms;
the first, which consists of strategic co-operation,
includes Russia, Turkey and Ukraine, is limited and
excludes personal data. Then, the US, Australia, Canada,
Colombia, Norway, Switzerland and some of the Balkan states
are operational partners but, as has been stressed, they
are not on the board and do not determine the future way in
which policy will develop. Indeed, it could be argued that
Norway and Iceland might be classified as having
Championship status, as against the Premier League status
enjoyed by the 28 at the present moment.
This is not going to be good enough for a country which
uses 40% of the capacity of SIENA, the Secure Information
Exchange Network Application. This is the main
data-protection conduit for information passing through
Europol. We are the second-largest contributor to the
European information system. We lead on four or five of the
13 EMPACT projects, co-ordinating member states and EU
organisations against Europol-identified serious organised
crime threat assessments. These are areas of great
significance for the agencies and for the UK. All these
would have to be conducted under data-protection protocols
over which we will have no say. If we are on board, if we
are alongside, we will not necessarily have any means of
influencing this. There may well be areas in which we have
significant knowledge. Of course, we may make enemies in
the course of this—by being a wee bit,
“smarter than the average bear”,
as Yogi Bear would say, we may put noses out of joint and
scores will have to be settled. They could that much more
easily be settled if the offending party is not in the room
when the decisions are taken.
Such contributions and organisational involvement are
crucial to the security and policing of the 27. I am
conscious of what the noble Lord, , said about us being
a wee bit complacent—that maybe they cannot do without us,
that the 27 will look favourably upon us—but what will have
to be arrived at are rather more pragmatic arrangements
than have been envisaged hitherto. Also, we will have to
recognise the examples of countries that have tried to
negotiate their way into a position of good standing. For
example, Denmark has had great difficulty in returning to
Europol after its block opt-out, which has been at the
expense of third-party status. Third-party status would
appear to be very difficult to achieve quickly. We cannot
find much consolation in precedent to suggest a speedy
solution. As the noble Lord, , says, if we can
skilfully stay in the club while we are trying to negotiate
a deal, we may get the best of both worlds. But that will
require a degree of skill being shown by our negotiators
and it remains to be seen whether we have people with the
requisite skills or whether a sufficiently high priority
will be placed on this as against the economic and trade
considerations, which, despite the words of the White
Paper, will tend to be the areas that attract most
attention. Accommodating the European Court of Justice
could well be anathema for the more zealous Brexiteers.
As the report says, Eurojust is the agency responsible for,
“supporting and strengthening coordination and cooperation
between national investigating and prosecuting authorities
in relation to serious crime affecting two or more Member
States”.
This covers mutual legal assistance, European arrest
warrants, the joint investigation teams and the provision
of,
“legal, technical and financial support”.
Much has been made of the suggestion that we will somehow
come out of this Brexit process not having to pay the
subscriptions, but I imagine that if we are going to
command any attention or sympathy we will have to pay our
way, and we may have to pay our way at a rather greater
rate than is enjoyed by the normal members. That is very
often the case with people who want to be, as it were,
county members of particular clubs. We might want to be the
offshore member of the arrangement.
These negotiating priorities are going to be difficult to
achieve. People have stressed the advantages of
co-operation and the opportunities to work multilaterally
through joint investigation teams. There are arrangements
for third countries and liaison prosecutors but they are of
a different order from those enjoyed by the management
board members such as the UK, and any new arrangements are
likely to be inferior to what we now have. The cost of
providing 27 UK liaison prosecutors and the time likely to
be necessary to secure the appropriate provisions will be
daunting. Switzerland took seven years. Those large
population centres of Liechtenstein and Moldova took five
and six years respectively for bilaterals to be achieved.
I come back to the point made by the noble Lord, . It may be that
while we are going through these negotiations it will be
status quo ante and therefore it will be okay for a wee
while. We might even think about re-joining in the
intervening period. These problems are not necessarily
insuperable but they will be difficult. The solutions will
be complex and, even with the best will in the world, they
will take time. We do not know what the impact will be on
crime fighting and terrorism fighting in Europe, and on the
international justice and security system. These things
remain to be seen.
That is perhaps the single most worrying aspect of the
outcome of our studies: we do not really know. We see pious
words in White Papers, written because the court told the
Government to write them—“This will be our third or fourth
priority. This will be very important” —but we do not know
the negotiating stances. We will not know for some
considerable time how long the negotiations will take. We
will certainly need far more information, perhaps on a
quarterly basis, about what is happening.
I would like to think that a report of this quality will
not be allowed to gather dust and that we will return to
this subject repeatedly. This is perhaps my rather rough
experience in the place along the road but there is nothing
that officials dislike more than having their feet held to
the fire by Select Committees, whose repeated returning to
the subject means that they know almost as much about it as
the officials do. I am not saying that I know as much about
it as the officials do, but to paraphrase FE Smith, I may
not be any the wiser but at least I am better informed than
I was before. I am very grateful for the opportunity to
have participated.
8.29 pm
-
(CB)
My Lords, that we shall be leaving the EU must now be a
given and although personally I was a remainer, I intend to
speak and vote in the forthcoming debate, albeit with a
heavy heart, in favour of authorising the proposed Article
50 notification. It is in that context that we now need to
consider the vital issues that arise as to our future
co-operation with Europe in the field of security and
justice. On this I, too, pay tribute to the work of the
noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, and her committee in
producing this excellent and perceptive report.
I put my name down for this debate only late yesterday,
when I noticed that there was close to a dearth of lawyers
due to speak. Nor was there any member of the Lords ad hoc
committee under the chairmanship of the noble Lord,
, which two years
ago reported on our extradition law and practice. It is
principally upon that matter that I will concentrate today,
and more particularly on the European arrest warrant which
in that extradition committee we explored in the greatest
detail—the noble Baroness, Lady Ludford, was one of many
expert witnesses before us. In doing so, I should perhaps
say that in my judicial capacity I have been involved over
the years in a good number of extradition cases, including
a number with the noble and learned Lord, of Craighead, who is
almost in the Chamber. Latterly, they included that of Mr
Assange—not that we have yet managed to extradite him.
To my mind, based on that experience it is really quite
difficult to exaggerate the huge benefit of the EAW to the
goal of attaining justice with regard to cross-border crime
and so forth, and avoiding safe havens for criminals across
Europe. Undoubtedly, it has promoted speedier, cheaper,
more streamlined and, I would argue, fairer processes
overall than previously existed. The DPP has described the
EAW as,
“three times faster and four times less expensive”,
than the alternatives. Let us consider some basic
statistics. Before 2004, when the scheme came into force,
fewer than 60 people a year were extradited from the United
Kingdom. Since 2004 more than 7,000 individuals, over 95%
of them foreign nationals, who were either accused or
already convicted of criminal offences, have been
extradited from the UK to other member states, and more
than 1,000 have been extradited to the United Kingdom from
other member states to face justice here.
Following the attempted second Tube bombings on 21 July
2007 we managed to extradite one of those involved from
Italy back here, under a European arrest warrant, in just
56 days. We should contrast that with the 10 years it took
to extradite one of those convicted of the terrorist
bombings in Paris from the UK to France under previous
arrangements. Notice, too, Operation Captura between Spain
and the UK, which again is illustrative: through the scheme
it has, since 2006, procured 61 wanted criminals who were
arrested in Spain and returned here. Paragraphs 126 to 128
of the report emphasise the huge value of the European
arrest warrant in extraditions, as described by those
principally responsible for criminal justice in the UK, and
the deficiencies of the pre-existing system. As one noble
Lord has already observed during the debate, that system
was based on the Council of Europe’s 1957 convention on
extradition.
Manifestly, Brexit notwithstanding, it is imperative that
we maintain the benefits of the EAW scheme—but how do we
achieve that consistent with the Government’s avowed
intention to sever our link with the ECJ, nowadays called
the CJEU—the Court of Justice of the European Union? Oddly,
our submission to the jurisdiction of that court seems to
be almost doctrinally central to the Government’s policy in
implementing Brexit. As part of regaining our sovereignty,
the Government appear to regard it as a core principle that
in future our laws will be made in Westminster, not
Brussels, and that any legal issues arising will be decided
not by the ECJ in Luxembourg but by our courts.
It might be thought that as an erstwhile senior British
judge, albeit now five years retired, I would
enthusiastically welcome such a change: a restoration of
final authority on legal disputes to the Supreme
Court—although here, unlike in the States, it is always
subject to Parliament’s legislative power to override the
court’s decision. Indeed, it is, in some ways, satisfying
that we shall no longer be bound by rulings of the ECJ. On
occasion, they are somewhat expansive rulings, open to
accusations of judicial overreach in pursuit of an agenda
of ever-closer union. Certainly, I am perfectly happy to
think that, with regard to vast swathes of our law, we
shall no longer be required to refer and defer to
Luxembourg on any uncertainties as to the correct
construction and application of EU provisions on VAT law,
procurement law, planning law, environmental law,
employment rights legislation, equality legislation, and on
our attempts on public interest grounds to remove EU
citizens who have committed a criminal offence here.
All these matters and, indeed, many more, are currently
subject to Luxembourg rulings and so to innumerable
EU-based regulatory schemes which, come Brexit and the
so-called great repeal Bill, we shall either have to
abandon or, more probably, incorporate in existing or
amended form into domestic law. Inevitably, if we keep
them, it will be as they have evolved and developed in the
light of past ECJ judgments—but as for the future, they
will presumably be subject only to rulings of our own
courts, any subsequent Luxembourg decisions in point being
merely persuasive rather than binding in effect.
That will be the general position. But—here I return to the
European arrest warrant and various of the other 35
measures relating to police and judicial co-operation in
criminal justice which we opted back into in 2013 of the
130 such third-pillar measures we opted out of post
Lisbon—severing our link to the ECJ need not and should not
be the position in relation to many of those measures,
particularly those covered in the report: not only the EAW
but, for example, Europol, Eurojust and various
data-sharing and information-sharing arrangements. In this
critical area of security and criminal justice, it is
essential that the Government recognise the need to
continue accepting the jurisdiction of the ECJ in this
relatively narrow context.
That is the modest enough price to be paid for the huge
benefits of operating—necessarily internationally—schemes
to combat the ever-increasing tendency of criminals to
operate and travel across borders. In this limited regard,
I urge the Government to put aside their surely somewhat
doctrinaire approach to the so-called recovery of
sovereignty. Whatever supranational adjudicative tribunal
we submit to, in this or any other area of international
dispute, to that extent inevitably we are, if one chooses
to look at it in this way, surrendering sovereignty. So
what? It is for the greater good. The International Court
of Justice and the European Court of Human Rights are just
illustrations of this.
I know that the Government are hoping for some kind of
bespoke supranational means of supervising the future
operation of the EAW scheme, and no doubt of other such
schemes that we have been discussing—but why on earth
should the other 27 nations agree to this? Consider the
suggested alternative to the EAW—the noble Lord, , has already touched
on this—which Norway and Iceland had no alternative but to
adopt because of course they are not member states.
Paragraphs 129 to 133 of the report deal with this. After
13 years of negotiation, the agreement with Norway and
Iceland is still not in force. In any event, it includes
the objectionable option of a state party being allowed to
refuse to extradite one of its own nationals. It also
contains an exception for political offences. It may, in
any event, require the non-EU state to be a member of
Schengen. Finally, and in this event of course decisively,
it would appear to require the non-EU state to submit to
the ECJ jurisdiction.
In conclusion, this is an excellent report, which rightly
suggests that we need desperately to retain the links that
it deals with. It is fervently to be hoped that the
Government will now digest the report thoroughly and
reflect it fully when they come to determine their future
negotiating position on these vital topics.
8.42 pm
-
Lord Kirkhope of Harrogate (Con)
My Lords, I refer to my entry in the Members’ register as a
practising lawyer. As one who not only gave evidence to
your Lordships for your report while in my “metamorphist”
state between the European Parliament and this place, but
who has spent the last 10 of my 17 years as an MEP and
party spokesman on these very subjects in Brussels, working
constantly on getting ever-closer co-operation between
Governments, police and intelligence agencies, I thought I
would offer a few thoughts at this time.
I congratulate the committee on an excellent report, which
demonstrates, as I have mentioned in many places and on
many occasions, a thoroughness and quality almost unique to
your Lordships and their excellent staff. There is so much
to endorse, but in my limited time today—thus allowing
other noble Lords perhaps a little more time to speak—I
will concentrate on just the most critical areas, to my
mind, which must be properly sorted out before the Brexit
negotiations are concluded. My evidence to your Lordships’
committee stands as a supplement to any remarks I make this
evening.
It took me seven years as rapporteur to negotiate the EU
PNR agreement between the 28 states, which incidentally is
right now, as we debate this evening, being vigorously
introduced. It took similar periods for other measures in
which I played a leading role, such as the European
Criminal Records Information System, which has already been
referred to; Schengen; SIS II; the Prüm system for exchange
of DNA and fingerprints; the joint investigation teams,
which we introduced over 10 years ago in the European
Parliament; Europol powers; and of course all the extremely
complicated but necessary data protection legislation. I
thought no job could get any tougher than the one I held
when I was UK Immigration Minister in the 1990s, but that
proved a little premature.
We have now reached a level of co-operation that has never
been seen before but which is increasingly vital to keep
abreast of terrorism and major criminality. We are now able
to deal in “virtual real time” as opposed to historical
exchanges of information or data necessitating bureaucratic
or constitutional delays, which of course used to put us
all at greater risk. However, real time comes with
obligations. In order to maintain trust and confidence so
that such material can be released, there have to be common
rules and ultimately common redress and accountability.
Currently that lies in Europe or through its institutions,
as well as in our national Parliament. The European Court
of Justice, although, as we know, largely limited to treaty
interpretation, has a vital role in ensuring that all
participants operate with the same safeguards. Post-Brexit,
how do we deal with a situation where the remaining 27
states are still obliged constitutionally to turn to those
institutions but we are not?
Recently, we have heard a number of interesting remarks
from Ministers, among them:
“As part of the exit negotiations, we will need to consider
the full range of options to ensure effective cooperation
after the UK leaves the EU”.
That was my honourable friend in the other place, the Home
Office Minister , on 19 August last year.
Last December my honourable friend said:
“Europol is of importance. As part of the exit
negotiations, the Government will discuss with the EU and
member states how best to continue co-operation on a range
of tools and measures, including membership of
Europol”.—[Official Report, Commons, 1/12/16; col. 1655.]
And my right honourable friend said in January:
“In my conversations with colleagues across Europe, I have
been encouraged by their view that it is essential to find
a way for our shared work on security to continue, but we
do have questions about how that should happen in practice
and we need to work through answering them”.—[Official
Report, Commons, 18/1/17; col. 958.]
They are of course right to acknowledge the importance of
getting this right, but how do they achieve it? It is
definitely one policy area where a so-called hard Brexit or
indeed any time vacuum is simply not a responsible option.
There is no World Trade Organization equivalent in this
vital area to fall back on.
Despite my known reservations, perhaps in a spirit of
helpfulness I might offer a little advice. First, we need
to recognise that our European partners will not and cannot
yield the control of all these measures from the present
intra-institutional arrangements. Secondly, as the
Economist Charlemagne column has suggested this week in
reference to a “Norwegian option”, as it put it, we must
recognise that even the great repeal Act will at best
freeze the European legislation and its parameters at the
date of its implementation, when in fact we need these
measures to be dynamic, as I would term it, and tuned to
future changes and safeguards; the article refers to that.
All EU legislation is now designed to a lesser or greater
extent to be dynamic, mostly as a result of the work we did
after the Lisbon treaty of 2009 when the European
Parliament acquired a greater say over all these measures.
So, even if my colleagues along the corridor and, I am
afraid, some in this House turn apoplectic at times at the
initials “ECJ” or “EP”, in my opinion we should try to
agree some new legal protocols. I myself was involved in
the Protocol 36 mechanisms regarding our opting out and
then opting in to various measures. Protocols are useful
things. We will certainly need to agree a new legal
protocol here so that we can accept changes when and if
they are made subsequent to our adoption of European
legislation through the great repeal Act.
Negotiating from this parallel position to find a means
ourselves of changing such protocols needs skilful
negotiation and a large dose of ongoing good will. Whether
we can get round the strict ban in a number of areas on
sharing information and data with third countries is a
matter of real concern to me, but I believe it is
achievable if the right device is found. A similar approach
may have to be deployed in a large number of other areas
where we plan at a specific date to take on large pieces of
EU legislation.
At times, I wonder whether the extent of the post-Brexit
challenges is totally appreciated by some people—obviously,
I exclude my noble friend from this—particularly in this
vital field. I know that the Brexit debate spends a lot of
time on matters other than those we are debating, but I
have given most of my recent political life to the cause of
protecting our citizens, through co-operation with our
European partners, from the fast-multiplying threats of
terrorism, evil criminality and cybercrime, while ensuring,
as far as possible, their freedoms and rights as
individuals. Surely, that is the primary duty of us all in
the undoubtedly difficult phase of national life we are now
entering.
8.51 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, like everyone else who has spoken, I put on
record my tremendous appreciation to the noble Baroness,
Lady Prashar, for what I think is a first-class report that
is a hard-hitting report in the very best sense—as a
focused report, it is a model—and tribute is therefore due
to all the members of her committee, to the officials who
worked with them and to the witnesses, who are tremendously
important. I often think that in our debates here we do not
look enough at the evidence given as the basis for the
committee’s conclusions, because often the evidence gives
powerful argument.
In a reflective and wise intervention, my noble friend
made almost in
passing what is a crucial point, when he said that the
approach in Britain to European matters has been that it is
an economic initiative, whereas for almost everybody else
in Europe it is a political matter. In the context of this
debate, one reason that we are in the predicament that we
are in is that we have never understood or embraced the
concept that, when the original statesmen were founding the
European Coal and Steel Community, it was important in
itself as an economic and commercial matter but it was not
the end; it was a means to an end. They were motivated and
driven by the concept of the peaceful, secure Europe for
which they were working. At every step which has taken
place in the institutions, we have fallen into the
self-deluding trap of saying, “We are looking at this just
in economic terms”. Historically, it has never been just
economic; it has been about building a Community. Now, in a
very specific and immediate area, we are faced with the
consequences of that.
I must declare an interest, because I serve on the justice
committee. As I have listened to the debate, and as I read
the report, it strikes me how much in common we are
learning on the two committees. In the justice committee,
particularly in the realms of matters such as family law or
commercial law, we have heard witness after witness tell us
that things are so much better, logical and helpful in the
context of what has emerged than they were before.
This brings us to the issue of the referendum. Like
everybody else, in this debate anyway, I accept that the
referendum has happened. I deeply regret the outcome, but
it has happened, and we have to approach things in the
reality of that result. But that does not mean that we
should shun the responsibility of learning from the
experience of the referendum. The wicked reality of the
referendum was that it was dominated by emotion and an
absence of sufficient concentration on the reality of the
situation.
Previously, I served on the home affairs committee under
the noble Lord, Lord Hannay, and then the noble Baroness,
Lady Prashar. What struck me when we looked at those
matters at that time was that every single witness, as far
as I could make out, who was operating in the sphere of
policing and security said that it would be completely
illogical to come out of the Community because, if they
were to fulfil their task, what had happened and the
co-operation taking place was essential to success. Some
put it quite strongly, actually—I must commend them as
officials.
It is a very serious matter, and we need to look at this.
As a political community in this House, and in the Commons,
irrespective of party, bear a heavy historical
responsibility because we have allowed the populist press
to get away with running the argument and failed to
communicate the reality, or even give the serious press the
amount of information or support that they deserve.
I am not a lawyer and I have not served in the police or
security services, although I have the utmost admiration
for them. I look at these matters as a political animal.
But what should we be learning from this? What does
sovereignty mean in the age in which we live? How can we
allow our debate and considerations to be dominated by this
preoccupation with sovereignty? I cannot think of a single
issue facing my children and grandchildren which can be
properly solved in a completely national context. The way
in which you look to the interests of British children,
adults and the vulnerable is in an international context.
Terrorism is international, as is crime and trafficking.
None of those matters respects borders. Drugs are an
international consideration.
How on earth does it advance the interests of the British
people to say that we want to reassert our sovereignty and
take back control for ourselves? That is not the way to
look to the interests of the British people. We look to
those interests by seeing that our future lies in our
effectiveness in international co-operation and as leaders
in international co-operation. When it comes to this
business of wanting to free ourselves from the dominating
and suffocating business of European law and European legal
professions and the rest and take back these matters into
our own hands, how many people realise that, in these new
arrangements that are emerging to which I referred, so
often it was British lawyers who took the lead in making
them a success? Why is that not more strongly asserted?
I will conclude on this note. Clearly, we have some very
hard work to do in the future, but an even greater
challenge is enabling the British people to understand the
reality of the age in which we are living. It does not
matter only in the realm of trafficking, crime or
migration; it matters in the realm of climate change. How
do you solve climate change as a sovereign island on your
own? You meet the challenges of climate change in the
context of your international approach. It reaches into
every dimension of government and politics. I have no doubt
that history—if it survives as a discipline, under the
crude pressures that operate today—will judge us on how far
we, as political leaders, have enabled people to understand
their global interdependence and how we, as political
practitioners, develop and strengthen global institutions,
not just European ones, to meet the realities with which we
are confronted.
The concept of global interdependence, and of our being
judged by the success we make of realising this and
fulfilling our destiny within it, is the future strength of
Britain. After the experience of the referendum, all of us,
irrespective of party, clearly have a very big task and
challenge to get our heads down and make sure that we make
that our priority.
9.02 pm
-
(LD)
My Lords, this is a very important report and the way the
noble Baroness introduced it today was helpful and
clarified the detail. We need to implement this absolutely
excellent report. When will the negotiations start? If we
have a hard-Brexit response from the members of the
European Union it might be difficult to promote the detail
of this report. This might be done in the lead-up to Brexit
and we should accept the recommendations of the committee
chaired by the noble Baroness.
The options available to the Government are, to some
extent, contrary to what they have said. They have said
that they want to legislate in Westminster, in place of the
European Union. However, I think that the law enforcement
agencies would like to see the current arrangements
maintained. The evidence which the committee took was
overwhelmingly in favour of the status quo. There is a
mutual interest across Europe in ensuring that the safety
of citizens is secured when the UK leaves the European
Union. We would be wise to open discussions before we get
into Article 50 and the arrangements for exiting the
European Union.
The European Union institutions should be accessible to the
United Kingdom to enable it to secure close co-operation
with the police and law enforcement in the other 27 member
states. Europol is a very strong organisation. Data show
that Europol’s response is much quicker than that under the
previous arrangements. Given the existence of Eurojust, the
Schengen information system, the European arrest warrant
and extradition agreements, there would be no quick fix if
we went back to the 1957 arrangements. The European arrest
warrant has resulted in quicker extradition arrangements.
The oversight and adjudication of the European Court of
Justice should be accepted in these cases. However, that
does not mean that the other measures of the European Court
of Justice need to be accepted. British influence has
helped develop policies in this area. We will lose out if
the European Union develops policies with no contribution
from Britain. When the United Kingdom leaves the European
Union, it will also leave the 35 pre-Lisbon treaty police
and criminal justice measures that the Prime Minister
described as vital when she was Home Secretary. I hope she
will recognise that these 35 pre-Lisbon treaty police and
criminal justice measures will require to be saved.
Bill Hughes, the former Director-General of the Serious
Organised Crime Agency, warned that,
“the UK is seen as a major and leading partner”,
in the development of security. That seems to be worthy of
maintenance. To bring back control of the laws to
Westminster would change what Bill Hughes put forward as
worthy of continuing. It is incompatible to maintain the
current access to law enforcement intelligence held in
Europol if we do not accept the need to belong.
Accountability now is to the European Commission, the Court
of Justice of the European Union and the Parliament. These
issues should be accepted by the nation.
On data sharing, the Schengen information system contains
information that 35,000 people are wanted under a European
arrest warrant. Each of the police and criminal justice
measures that the UK rejoined in December 2014 are worthy
of being maintained now. Extraditions these days under the
European arrest warrant take days rather than months or
years. The arrangements suggested by the committee are
worthy of implementation, and before the Brexit
negotiations occur.
9.12 pm
-
(CB)
My Lords, the report we are debating this evening about the
implications of Brexit in the field of internal security
and police co-operation is truly excellent. I congratulate
the committee and its chair, my noble friend Lady Prashar,
who introduced the report so eloquently this evening, on
its quality. As one who is not a member of the
sub-committee but was its chair some years ago, I can say
that without self-congratulation but with the benefit of
experience. Listening to the debate this evening, I get a
slight feeling of déjà vu all over again, because of course
we went through all this over Protocol 36, and quite a lot
of the personae dramatis are still around, including the
Home Secretary, who has of course moved into No. 10, and
various other noble Lords around this Chamber this evening
who were involved in that.
We should not forget that this report is of course one of a
suite of six produced by the EU Select Committee. They are
a standing reproach to the Government’s failure until a few
days ago to provide even the fairly skimpy indications
given in the White Paper. The report spells out in detail
why it is in the UK’s national interest now to negotiate
the closest possible relationship with the European Union
in these policy fields, preserving if possible the great
advances in law enforcement co-operation that have taken
place over the last few years. I say that about the
national interest without the slightest hesitation, because
that was the conclusion of the House of Commons by an
overwhelming majority and the conclusion of this House by
unanimity, only two years ago in 2014. Having said rather a
rude word or two about the White Paper, I recognise and
welcome that the Prime Minister singled the sector out and
endorsed that view about the national interest in her
Lancaster House speech. The White Paper continues that
work. As other noble Lords have said, the challenge now is
to turn that into reality in the Brexit negotiations which
begin next month. As the report says, that will neither be
easy nor straightforward. Here are just a few thoughts on
that.
First, we need to realise that there is a cliff edge in
this sector if the two-year period provided for under
Article 50 expires without any agreement on either a
temporary or lasting solution. This cliff edge is far more
real than it is in the trade field, where, as the noble
Lord, Lord Kirkhope, said, we can always fall back on the
plan B of WTO membership—although that is, in my view,
likely to be quite damaging to this country’s economy. But
there is no plan B for justice and home affairs. If we go
out then, we shall simply drop out of membership of Europol
and Eurojust, and we will lose the European arrest warrant
overnight. We will lose the ability to extradite wanted
criminals out of this country back to the places they are
wanted, in one direction, and back into this country when
they have committed crimes here—there are many examples of
people we have got back in that way. We will lose overnight
the Schengen information system, the European criminal
records system, the Prüm decisions on DNA and other
information, and the passenger name recognition
arrangements for civil aviation. That is an awful lot of
things which we cannot afford to do without. However, on
the day we leave without an agreement, that is what will
happen. We should have no illusions about that.
Secondly, any negotiations for the new relationship will
not be able to duck the tricky issue of a continuing
budgetary contribution. After all, you cannot have this
sort of co-operation for free, nor should we think that we
can—it costs money. There will have to be some judicial
mechanism, and here my noble and learned friend Lord Brown
set out with wonderful clarity what the European Court of
Justice means in this area and why we cannot simply
demonise it, as the Government have been doing
systematically for some months now. I have to say I find
that fairly astonishing. Look at the 44 years in which we
have been under the jurisdiction of the European Court of
Justice. Of course there have been occasions when it has
ruled in a way we have found inconvenient or even
infuriating, but they are as nothing compared to the number
of times it has struck down non-tariff barriers in other
member states, ruled as illegal state aids that were
preventing our firms competing, or removed all sorts of
restricted practices. Why on earth we feel the need to
demonise it now, I do now know.
Frankly, whatever we do in the general sense, in this
sector we cannot afford to ignore the need for some form of
dispute settlement procedure. Such a procedure has to be
not only between Governments, which could perhaps be based
on a model of the EFTA court, but between individuals,
because the European arrest warrant involves individuals.
They may wish to take their case to a court, so we have to
have somewhere for them to go. If we are to preserve the
arrest warrant system, there has to be some recourse for
our citizens and for other citizens in Europe to a court or
dispute mechanism of some kind. We cannot avoid that. It is
welcome that the Government have recognised in the White
Paper that there will have to be some form of dispute
settlement procedure—having been in a state of denial up to
now—but as yet, they have not got very far along the
learning curve.
Thirdly, we need to face up to the issue raised by the
noble Lord, Lord Kirkhope: we do not just want a static
solution that works on the day we leave. We need to produce
a living solution that will continue to work in the years
ahead when we will be outside the European Union, and the
European Union will be developing co-operation in these
fields, hopefully in close concert with us.
We really need a process by which Britain can opt in to new
measures when it wants to. If not, we will have the agony
that was experienced at the other end of the Corridor every
time a measure had to be adopted through the opt-in
procedure. There was a great rampage about how awful it was
that we were accepting this and accepting that; then, when
they got into the Division Lobbies, there were about 25
votes against 530. We must try to avoid that. In the
negotiations, the Government need to look for a simpler
method of opting in to continuing with new legislation,
because the criminals will not stop. The international
dimension of their crimes will not stop and we will need to
work with our former partners if we are to achieve anything
like the results we want in this field. That aspect of this
continuing issue needs to be taken into account.
The three points I have raised may seem daunting, and they
are. I do not doubt that they are difficult for the
Government. There will be plenty of naysayers in Brussels
and in Westminster, but the mutual advantage—indeed, the
mutual necessity—of sustaining close and effective
co-operation on these matters should enable those obstacles
to be overcome. I look forward to hearing from the Minister
how the Government intend to set about doing that, and in
particular her response to the three points I have raised.
I hope our negotiators will remember one truth: our
national internal security neither stops nor begins at the
water’s edge.
9.23 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, it is always a pleasure to follow the noble Lord,
Lord Hannay, particularly in a debate on Europe, on which
he knows so much and has so much experience. But I thought
on this occasion that he was rather more optimistic than I
was about the chances of the Government coming to some
satisfactory negotiation with our European partners. I find
rather more convincing the analysis that we heard earlier
from the noble Lord, , and the noble and
learned Lord, Lord Brown.
I add my voice to those who have already paid tribute to
the noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, and her committee. It is
an excellent report. It is not too long, thank goodness,
which most reports in this House are. It is very lucid and
well written, as most reports in this House are. It is
decisive, which is essential, and it has given rise to a
very useful debate.
Well, here we go. Not a week goes by without us suddenly
having a new insight into the costs of Brexit and the
wanton damage and destruction that this process will bring
about for our country if it goes very much further. There
is pretty much unanimity in the House this evening on the
matter of the costs of Brexit in this area. I think that in
their analyses everyone has agreed in principle with the
remarks of the noble Lord, , who said that
anything less than the status quo will lead to a diminution
of the security of all our citizens. That is an extremely
serious matter. We are facing the prospect of actually
diminishing our security. People’s lives will be at risk,
and it is quite extraordinary that any responsible
Government of an ancient country like ours should seriously
contemplate measures which run that risk, but unfortunately
that is the truth. I think it is a truth which has been
accepted by all speakers in the debate, sad and difficult
though it is for many to acknowledge it, but it is a
consensus to which I add myself.
I have to say that I do not share the view of most
colleagues who have spoken on both sides of the House that
we should just despair of this. There has been a sense of
hopelessness: “Well, perhaps the British public did not
look at the facts, and maybe they did not have the facts
they should have had at the time. But it is too late now,
it has happened and we have to make the best of a very bad
job”. I have never shared that view in politics. If one is
heading for a disaster, if you can see that you are sailing
into a storm, you change course. Moreover, if you believe
in popular sovereignty, you must believe in the right of
the people to change their mind if they wish to do so, and
in the right of all of us to try to persuade them to change
their mind if we think it is important that they should do
so in our long-term national interests. I have no
inhibitions about that.
I shall go briefly over the points that are most at stake
in this case. I do not ask the House to accept my words. I
shall rely entirely on the testimony offered to the
committee, which is now before every Member of the House,
and indeed the Government’s own statements on the subject.
Let us take first the issue of Europol because we all know
how important it is. The report states:
“Our witnesses were unequivocal in identifying the UK’s
future relationship with Europol as a critical priority.
They also made clear that an operational agreement with
Europol akin to those that other third countries have
negotiated would not be sufficient to meet the UK’s needs”.
That is a decisive and extremely well-thought-through
conclusion. The report goes on:
“Achieving it, however, may be problematic”.
In other words, we have a great asset in Europol since it
is both useful and vital, but the Government are putting
the whole thing at risk and we may not get any kind of deal
which even begins to substitute for the utility of the
asset we currently have.
Let us move on to some of the other issues about
information exchange between police officers, which is
obviously very important. I refer to the Schengen
information system, known as SIS II. It was described by
the National Crime Agency as,
“an absolute game-changer for the UK … It is linked to the
Police National Computer so that officers can stop a car
with French plates and Hungarian nationals in it, undertake
checks and find details of stolen property, wanted people,
alerts and the like”.
It is clearly an enormously useful instrument for policing
which we may be on the point of losing. I turn now to the
Prum measures, which ironically came into force only just
last year:
“The Prüm Decisions require Member States to allow the
reciprocal searching of each other’s databases for DNA
profiles (required in 15 minutes), Vehicle Registration
Data (required in 10 seconds) and fingerprints (required in
24 hours)”.
Here again we risk taking away from the British police. I
also refer to Professor Peers, who commented on SIS II.
The report is equally clear about the European arrest
warrant, stating,
“the Government suggested that ‘Norway and Iceland’s
Schengen membership was key to securing even this level of
agreement’, and that ‘there is no guarantee that the UK
could secure a similar agreement outside the EU given that
we are not a member of the Schengen border-free area’”.
The European arrest warrant, which we have heard is so
important to policing, is itself at risk. The committee’s
view, which it is giving to the House this evening, is that
there is no real likelihood of our being able to get
anything as good as we have at present in any of these
three areas.
In those circumstances, I put to the Government two
questions. First, what is stopping us remaining part of
this home affairs and justice system—of Europol, the Prüm
system, the information exchanges and part of the European
arrest warrant? Secondly, if nothing is stopping us, why do
the Government not want to remain part of it? Is there a
pragmatic reason in terms of national interest why we
should not remain part of a system that, in the views of
everybody who has expressed a view this evening, including
some very expert people, is clearly essential to our
security in those areas? If the Government are saying there
is no practical reason why we cannot be a member of the
system and it is simply that we do not like the European
Court of Justice or the politics, I am afraid they are
contradicting themselves. This has already been quoted many
times, but the Government said in 2014 that they would,
“never put politics before the protection of the British
public”.—[Official Report, Commons, 10/11/14; col. 1224.]
If they are saying, “We have a very good system here
protecting the British public—the best we have ever had. We
want to get rid of it not for practical reasons, but mainly
for political reasons”, by definition they are in
contradiction of their own commitment. I could use
non-parliamentary language to describe the situation in
which they proceed directly in contradiction with the
description of their activities that they have given to the
public.
Those two questions are very important. What is stopping us
remaining full members of these institutions? If it is
simply because the Government do not want to join them, why
do they not?
9.31 pm
-
of Kirkwhelpington
(CB)
My Lords, before speaking to your Lordships’ House I
declare an interest in that, after being Commissioner of
the Metropolitan Police, I was chairman of the advisory
board of Interpol for three and a half years.
I pay tribute to the noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, and the
outstanding work done by the sub-committee in the report.
Time is moving on, and this report encapsulates some of the
problems enshrined for policing in future if we depart from
the EU, so I will not detain the House long. However, there
are one or two issues I will draw attention to.
So many of the current arrangements and co-operative
frameworks in place are, as we referred to, mission
critical for UK law enforcement agencies. There is no doubt
that exit from the EU places these at risk. We must
absolutely underline that, potentially, this will make the
United Kingdom less safe if negotiations are not made to
secure optimal solutions to the changes that will result
from our exiting the EU. The time the negotiations may take
and the costs involved in setting up these new systems are
surely a major factor. We have heard from the noble Lord,
Lord Kirkhope of Harrogate, and the noble and learned Lord,
Lord Brown, the time it will take to bring these things
into place.
Let us make no mistake that over time the United Kingdom
has been a key player in shaping Europol and all the
agencies that now work so effectively in the United Kingdom
and relate to the EU. By leaving the EU, we will lose an
immense amount of influence unless steps are taken to
ensure we do not. An issue of great importance is this: my
experience over 9/11, which took everyone by surprise, was
that we were used by the United States as an entry point
into Europe for information and vice versa, because what
had been set up by my predecessor as Commissioner of the
Metropolitan Police and expanded during that period of time
was essential to security, not just of this country and
Europe, but worldwide.
The report says that we have a strong mutual interest in
going forward with the EU and its organisations. There is a
fair amount of optimism that these mutual interests will
play a very big part in allowing us to continue with the
structures that we have at the present time. However, I
draw attention to the report’s point that this could lead
to a false sense of optimism with regard to the United
Kingdom’s strength in negotiation. With the UK departing
the EU, we will no longer be accountable to the same
oversight and adjudication as the EU 27, notably in respect
of us working together with the EU. There is even doubt as
to whether the EU 27 will be amenable to creating bespoke
adjudication arrangements or whether such arrangements
would be an adequate substitute for the existing
arrangements. There will be tensions, which were outlined
more eloquently than I can this evening.
For me, Europol is an example of why we should have a
certain amount of optimism. We have been at the very centre
of creating Europol; Europol is a success because of some
of the inputs and leadership shown. At one stage—I do not
know whether it is the case now—40% of Europol was staffed
by United Kingdom police officers and staff. Nobody could
say that Europol has not been a massive success in both
arrests and protecting this country. There are mutual
benefits both for those 27 countries in Europe and for
ourselves. Of course there are, but we should not take that
as an excuse for false optimism for the future.
It is on the data–sharing issue that I get particularly
passionate. In 2014 and 2015, the Government and Parliament
judged that it was in the UK’s national interest—as has
been outlined by my noble friend Lord Hannay—to participate
in data-sharing platforms, such as the second generation
Schengen information system, the European Criminal Records
Information System, the Prüm decisions and the passenger
name records. It means that police officers operating out
there on the streets of London and around the United
Kingdom and those operating within Europe have an ability
to get information immediately. It means that someone
stopped in Soho five to six years ago for murder was
identified immediately because of these systems. It means
that passengers going on to planes can be identified as
suspects around the world and, particularly, within Europe.
We need it: it is essential for our safety. It would be
absolute madness to destroy that.
In relation to the European arrest warrant, which is
critical to law enforcement capabilities, I believe—I could
be wrong, but I hope that I am right; the noble Lord,
, referred to it—that the
report recommends that the UK follow precedents set by
Iceland and Norway in terms of bilateral extradition
agreements with the EU, which mirror the existing
provisions as far as possible. This agreement was signed
over a decade ago and has still not come into force. If
that is the way that we are going to be approaching our
negotiations on where we are going in the future, it is an
unacceptable risk. It creates unacceptable dangers and we
must make sure that the Government do not fall into that
trap.
The noble Lord, , spoke with great
optimism about the police service and the security forces
taking this thing forward on their own. I thank him for
that: it is nice to know that there are people with
confidence in policing these days. However, it needs
political support at the highest level; it needs the
negotiation skills that are in this Chamber now; and it
needs these people to be pragmatic, direct and persuasive.
I have some questions for the Government before I sit down.
Have they worked out how long it will take to negotiate the
UK back into systems we may well be part of when we depart,
perhaps in two years’ time? Is the risk to the safety of
the people of the United Kingdom which will arise out of
operational gaps a priority? Surely, it must be.
Are the precedents laid out in this report in relation to
the problems and the detail of those problems going to be
taken into account? Someone referred to holding the
Government’s feet to the fire. I think we have an absolute
duty to do so in this House. It is essential that we keep
coming back to this report and, if I may say so, growing it
in the way that we talk about in relation to our safety.
A further question is: should this negotiation phase be
entered into, what will happen in the meantime, given the
loss of data systems and databases that are absolutely
crucial, as I have outlined, to our everyday policing?
Without this work—you need only talk to officers on the
street—the safety of this country could be hampered for
years, and that is totally unacceptable. My noble friend
talked about the
status quo. What is wrong in trying to hold on to the
status quo until we have something else which is viable to
take its place? If we do not do that, there will be a gap
and a vacuum which is incredibly dangerous to the safety of
this country.
What will be the cost of setting up new systems, which will
run into millions of pounds? Have the Government looked
into that, or into who will pay for it? Do the Government
foresee years of expensive negotiation as the only way to
settle these issues, or is there another way to secure
essential EU relationships and fill operational gaps in
order to maintain public safety? Surely, we need to address
these questions.
It took an awfully long time to create what we have
created. Some people have said to me as I go round the
world that it is an exemplar of how the world should
operate in the very dangerous environment that we are in
now. Would it not be an absolute tragedy if this were
destroyed overnight?
9.43 pm
-
(LD)
My Lords, my noble friend Lord Maclennan reminded us, as
does the report, that the Prime Minister, when Home
Secretary, said that it was vital that we stayed in the 35
policing and justice measures. The noble Lord, Lord
Kirkhope, with whom I worked for 15 years in the European
Parliament, strongly backed this up. He and I did not
always agree during those 15 years but I am glad to say
that we do now. The report stresses that the measures we
are talking about are part of a complex and interconnected
network of agreements and arrangements that are difficult
to compartmentalise, and of course they have been through a
filter, as the noble Lord, Lord Hannay, reminded us. Just
two years ago these were boiled down from 130 measures to
35 that the Government regarded as vital. How can they be
reduced any further?
However excellent our police are, anything short of full
participation is going to be less effective, more
cumbersome and more long-winded and will therefore hamper
our police and prosecutors in apprehending criminals and
terrorists, as the noble Lord, , reminded us.
Indeed, we could, in the words of the noble Lord, Lord
Hannay, fall off a cliff edge in this area, which would be
unacceptable. Of course, we were blessed with not one but
two former Met commissioners in the debate. The noble Lord,
of Kirkwhelpington,
has just stressed that the UK has been a key player in EU
co-operation. The noble Lord, , listed almost all
the Brits in top positions. We have also had several—two at
least—presidents of Eurojust.
Other noble Lords have picked out adjectives in the report
in order to stress the key importance of participating in
all these measures. I will not repeat them. Europol is a
“critical priority”. Of course, it is only as a full member
of Europol that we get the full rights of direct access to
intelligence and information, and the ability to share
those. On Eurojust, the Crown Prosecution Service said
that,
“they were heavy users of Eurojust, listing it among their
top priorities for any forthcoming negotiation”,
and that bilateral arrangements such as liaison prosecutors
cannot,
“do what Eurojust does, which is to facilitate the
multi-national co-ordination that is so important”.
The European arrest warrant is dear to my heart. My last
work in the European Parliament was to write a report on
the reforms that the European arrest warrant needed. This
has not been pursued by the European Commission, to my
regret. It could be improved but we need to work with what
exists. The noble and learned Lord, —we
were also blessed with a former Supreme Court Justice—said
that it was impossible to overstate the importance of the
European arrest warrant to securing justice. The report
says that it is,
“a critical component of the UK’s law enforcement
capabilities”.
The report also says that it would be,
“an abrupt shock to UK policing … posing a risk to the
safety of the public”,
if we were not involved in the data-sharing arrangements.
The National Crime Agency was,
“emphatic about the operational significance of access to
SIS II”.
It said that being in SIS was one of its “top three
priorities” and,
“an absolute game-changer for the UK”.
One could go on.
The case is so powerful and has been made so strongly
tonight that we must stay in these measures. What is
stopping us? Essentially, the Government are putting their
objections to the European Court of Justice above national
security. One thing that we will need to comply with are
the data-protection arrangements, as enforced by the
European Court of Justice. The report says that this is
going to be,
“a necessary pre-condition for exchanging data for law
enforcement purposes”.
The outgoing Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation,
, said:
“It should not be assumed that Brexit will relieve the UK
from the need for compliance with standards of privacy and
data protection set out in EU legislation”,
or by the European Court of Justice.
We must also expect greater scrutiny of our surveillance
practices, which perhaps we have not had to the same extent
as has the United States while we have been a member of the
EU. I think we can expect the content of the Investigatory
Powers Act to come under close scrutiny when we are seeking
an arrangement with the EU without being a member,
particularly if we are trying to avoid oversight by the
European Court of Justice. The Government claim that
security is a top priority but they simply cannot deliver
the same level of functionality if we are outside the EU
framework because they are not in fact making security a
top priority; they are making the political red line that
suits the Conservative Party—rejection of the ECJ—the top
priority. There was an astonishing response which the
Secretary of State for Exiting the EU, , gave to a member of the
other place. I confess I had not picked it up but I looked
it up online. He said that yes, we would have to pull out
of Prüm—I think he was referring to other measures—because
we had to avoid the jurisdiction of the ECJ. That is a very
peculiar turnaround of priorities.
The report reminds us that there is this tension between
the maintenance of strong security co-operation and
refusing oversight arrangements—perhaps not only those of
the court but those of the European Parliament as well. We
know that our police will do their best but it would be a
dereliction of duty to fail to give them the support they
need to work with their counterparts in other member states
because of what I think the noble and learned Lord, Lord
Brown, referred to as a doctrinal objection.
The Government will seek bespoke adjudication arrangements.
We must hope that they will succeed however they can in
keeping us close to practical EU co-operation, but there
will be real problems in trying to step aside from the ECJ.
The EU can act only in compliance with the European Charter
of Fundamental Rights, and the court is the ultimate
arbiter of that. It is impossible for the EU to sign an
agreement with the UK that conflicts with either the
charter or ECJ case law.
The agreement will have to be policed and enforced. If the
UK acted in ways that breached the terms of our agreement,
it might be open to an EU citizen to take a case to the ECJ
and get the decision including the UK agreement annulled.
That is what happened to the safe harbour arrangements with
the US when an Austrian student, Max Schrems, went to the
court because of concerns about US intelligence agencies.
We need to think through what could actually happen. We
will have to keep up with legal developments in the rest of
the EU, a point that has been made this evening, because if
we diverge from EU law a gap will open up and we will leave
ourselves open to the potential of the agreement being
annulled. It remains to be seen whether our EU partners
will agree to set aside the ECJ in favour of a bespoke
dispute resolution mechanism. But we do not seek just to
stay in one measure, whether that is Europol, SIS, the EAW
or whatever. We want to remain in the whole package and
there is no precedent for the EU agreeing to sideline the
ECJ with such a large agreement as we would seek.
I conclude that it would be truly extraordinary if the
mantra of taking back control, interpreted by this
Government as avoiding ECJ jurisdiction, ended up handing
control over to the criminals and terrorists. When you have
the experience that we have listened to this evening on the
police and judicial side urging the Government to put
safety first and back our police and prosecutors, it would
surely be an unpatriotic neglect of national security to
put political prejudice first—and, in the words of the
noble Lord, Lord Hannay, to demonise the court. That would
involve being soft on crime, and I am sure the Government
do not wish to do that.
9.54 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I fear that most, if not all, of what I want to
say has already been said a number of times this evening;
nevertheless, I still intend to say it—in somewhere near 10
minutes, I hope.
Along with other noble Lords who have spoken, I, too,
express my thanks to the noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, and
her sub-committee for their very helpful and comprehensive
report. The committee pointed out that it was only two
years ago that many of the EU measures we are now due to
leave with our exit from the European Union were deemed
vital by the then Home Secretary, to the extent that,
having exercised a block opt-out from police and criminal
justice measures from December 2014, we promptly opted back
in to 35 of them from the same date, accepting, as well,
that the enforcement powers of the European Commission and
full Court of Justice of the European Union jurisdiction
would apply in respect of those 35 measures.
The Government’s recent White Paper declares an intention,
after we depart from the European Union, to,
“continue to work with the EU to preserve UK and national
security, and to fight terrorism and uphold justice across
Europe”.
The Government also state in paragraph 11.7 of the White
Paper that they will,
“look to negotiate the best deal we can with the EU to
cooperate in the fight against crime and terrorism”,
and that:
“Public safety in the UK and the rest of Europe will be at
the heart of this aspect of our negotiation”.
That is not, of course, the same as saying that public
safety will be paramount or the number one priority.
The report from the EU committee sets out some of the
issues that will have to be addressed if the Government’s
objectives are to be achieved. Most significantly, the
report states in its introductory summary:
“We caution, however, against assuming that because there
is a shared interest in a positive outcome, negotiations
will unfold smoothly. Even with the utmost good will on
both sides, it seems inevitable that there will be
practical limits to how closely the UK and the EU-27 can
work together on police and security matters if they are no
longer accountable to, and subject to oversight and
adjudication by, the same supranational institutions,
notably the Court of Justice of the European Union. There
is, therefore, a risk that any new arrangements that the
Government and the EU-27 put in place by way of replacement
when the UK leaves the EU will be sub-optimal relative to
present arrangements, possibly leaving the people of the
UK—and their European neighbours—less safe”.
Do the Government agree?
The committee also goes on to say in the summary of its
report that in leaving the EU, we will lose the platform
from which we have been able to exert influence on the
development of EU agencies, policies and practice in the
field of security and policing, and that this will result
in an attendant risk to our ability to protect our security
interests in future. The committee goes on to say that
accordingly,
“the Government will also need to examine what structures
and channels it should remain part of or find substitutes
for in order to influence the EU security agenda, which
will inevitably have implications for the UK’s own
security”.
Do the Government agree?
The committee also says:
“There must be some doubt as to whether the EU-27 will
prove willing to establish the ‘bespoke’ adjudication
arrangements envisaged by the Government”,
that this issue may prove particularly difficult in the
negotiations on our future relationship with EU agencies
such as Europol, and that it may also affect the likelihood
of maintaining mutual recognition of judicial decisions in
criminal matters. The Government told the committee that in
future laws would be made in Westminster, not in Brussels,
and would be interpreted by British courts, not the
European Court of Justice. As a result, the Government had
concluded that any new arrangements that have to be put in
place, or which may be put in place after our withdrawal
from Europe, would have to be the subject of bespoke
adjudication arrangements which, as the committee pointed
out, rather begs the question of whether the EU 27 are
likely to be willing to devise such arrangements in order
to facilitate co-operation with the UK.
In the light of this, the committee considers it
conceivable,
“that the Government will encounter a tension between two
of its four overarching objectives in the
negotiation—bringing back control of laws to Westminster
and maintaining strong security co-operation with the EU”.
The committee’s view was that the safety of the people of
the UK should be the overriding consideration in attempting
to resolve that tension, and it urged the Government in its
report to ensure that this is the case. Could the
Government say clearly whether that would be their stance
in such a situation?
The Government have a responsibility to provide firm
assurances that our nation’s security and our ability to
combat crime within our borders will not be compromised by
our decision to leave the EU and what flows from that. I
invite the Government to give that assurance tonight, not
by saying that that will be an overarching objective, but
by saying that it will actually and definitely be the case.
The security threats we face are not confined to our
national borders any more than they are in other European
countries, which is why there is the current level of
co-operation between European countries on security,
policing and criminal justice issues. Whether we are
confronting international terrorist networks, tracking down
those seeking to evade justice, obtaining vital information
on the activities of suspects abroad or seeking to maintain
effective border controls, it makes more sense to act
together.
Our ability, on our withdrawal from Europe, to continue to
participate in the European arrest warrant arrangements,
our continued future relationship with Europol and our
future access to Europe-wide crime prevention databases,
including the Schengen information system, are key issues
affecting our nation’s security and are among the matters
addressed in the committee’s report. Since the European
arrest warrant was introduced in 2004, the United Kingdom
has used it to bring more than 2,000 individuals from
outside the UK to face justice, according to my
information. We will have hurdles to overcome if we are to
maintain the current arrangements when we are not in the
European Union. The alternative is that we fall back on
previous extradition treaties that are far more cumbersome
and far less effective.
The committee says in its report that its witnesses were
unequivocal in identifying the United Kingdom’s future
relationship with Europol as a critical priority. However,
that does not necessarily appear to be the Government’s
stance, since the Secretary of State for Exiting the
European Union said in the House of Commons a few months
ago, when asked whether we could maintain our membership of
Europol, that the Government’s objective was simply to
preserve the relationship with the European Union on
security matters as best we can. The recent White Paper
does not appear to take us much further forward, except to
say:
“We are driving, or co-driving, almost half of Europol
projects against serious organised crime”.
That could be interpreted as the Government’s stance being
that other European nations will therefore be clamouring to
give us whatever we want in respect of our future
relationship with Europol. Perhaps the Minister could say
whether the Government share the unequivocal view of the
witnesses to the EU sub-committee that our future
relationship with Europol is a critical priority. If so,
what criteria would have to be met for the Government to
deem acceptable our future relationship with Europol once
we have left the European Union?
Access to pan-European databases is particularly important
for our police. Can the Government say whether we will
still have access to these databases when we are outside
the European Union, and if so, on what basis, bearing in
mind that the most recent Home Office annual report said
that strengthening data exchanges with our European allies
was essential to combating terrorism?
We have real concerns that it will become more difficult
for us to protect our citizenry when we leave the European
Union because the complexities of maintaining the current
cross-border co-operation between our police and security
services will become greater. That will certainly be the
case if the Government intend to stick rigidly in the
negotiations to each and every one of their top four
overarching objectives—particularly the control of laws
having always to be at Westminster and always being
interpreted by British courts, whatever the consequences.
The Government need to remember that although the people of
this country voted to leave the European Union, they did
not vote to put at risk either their own personal security
or that of the country as a whole.
10.04 pm
-
The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Williams of
Trafford) (Con)
My Lords, I take this opportunity to thank the EU Home
Affairs Sub-Committee for producing its report, Brexit:
Future UK-EU Security and Police Co-operation. In answer to
some of the questions from the noble Lord, , I say that the
Government will respond specifically to the report. I am
grateful to those who have spoken during today’s long
debate and in particular to the noble Baroness, Lady
Prashar, for securing it.
A wide range of views have been expressed from across the
Chamber, but I am reassured by the broad consensus across
the House that the Government should continue a high level
of co-operation with our EU neighbours on security and
policing matters. The Government are committed to strong
practical co-operation on security, law enforcement and
criminal justice now and after we leave. We will work with
our European partners as we negotiate our exit to find
solutions that promote security in the UK, across Europe
and beyond. I am very pleased that my noble friend
is optimistic
about the future.
The perpetrators of crime and terrorism do not respect
borders, and the threat that they pose is becoming
increasingly transnational. We know that international
organised crime groups exploit vulnerabilities such as
inadequate law enforcement and criminal justice structures.
Furthermore, threats such as cybercrime and online child
sexual exploitation are by definition international in a
technically interconnected world. In the face of these
common threats, it is difficult to see how it would be in
anyone’s interest for exit negotiations to result in a
reduction in the effectiveness of security, law enforcement
and criminal justice co-operation.
Our relationship with the EU currently centres on a number
of practical co-operation measures that have been developed
in response to the changing shape of the EU and the
evolving threat of international crime. We continue to
value our co-operation and information sharing through
measures such as the European arrest warrant, which so many
noble Lords have mentioned, together with Europol, the
European criminal record information system and the
second-generation Schengen information system, in our
effort to fight crime and prevent terrorism. The UK will
continue to participate fully in all these measures while
we remain a member of the EU.
Leaving will of course mean that our relationship with the
EU will have to change. In the UK we are examining the
mechanisms now in place to support practical co-operation
in the fight against crime and terrorism, to help to
identify potential options for how we might work with our
EU partners in future. Looking ahead, we need to negotiate
the best deal that we can with Europe, including thinking
about the tools and mechanisms for co-operation with EU
member states that help to keep all European citizens safe.
The UK’s future access to the practical mechanism through
which we co-operate with the EU will form part of the wider
exit negotiations. The UK is in a unique position, having
taken a leading role in developing—
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The Minister says that when we leave the EU our
relationship with the institutions in the justice and home
affairs field will have to change. Will they have to change
because the Government want them to change, or in her view
will it be because our European partners will insist that
they change?
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My Lords, they will change because that is an inevitable
fact of leaving the EU. We will no longer be members of the
EU.
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That is not an answer.
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Well, that is the answer that I am giving the noble Lord.
Perhaps at this late hour he will indulge me until I get to
the end, and he might be a bit more satisfied by the time I
have finished.
Looking ahead, we need to negotiate the best deal that we
can with Europe, including thinking about these tools and
mechanisms with EU member states that help to keep European
citizens safe. We are in a unique position, having taken a
lead role in developing the practical co-operation measures
now in place across the EU, and our expertise and drive for
high standards are valued by our EU partners. That is why
we will not seek to adopt a model currently enjoyed by
another country; we are looking for a bespoke approach that
works for the UK as well as for the EU.
Those negotiations will be complex and lengthy, and it
would not be appropriate to pre-empt the outcome. I know
that many noble Lords are anxious to understand the detail
of the relationship that we may agree with the EU but,
although the Government are keen to provide clarity where
we can, it is also important that we do nothing to
undermine our negotiating position.
What is absolutely clear is that this Government are
committed to ongoing co-operation to keep all European
citizens safe—a point that noble Lords have made—and that
the desire to do what is necessary to keep our people safe
is not one-sided. My ministerial colleagues have spoken to
their counterparts in several EU countries, and I am
reassured to hear that there is a shared understanding of
the importance of effective ongoing co-operation.
I will now respond in more detail to some of the points
that noble Lords have raised this evening. All noble Lords
have talked about our relationship with Europol. As noble
Lords have said, Europol’s prime objective is to strengthen
and facilitate co-operation in preventing and combating
serious organised crime and terrorism. By providing a
platform for members to share intelligence and information,
and through a strong analysis function, it offers
unparalleled opportunities to prevent serious crime and
protect EU citizens, including those in the UK. The UK
plays a lead role in Europol; indeed, the UK staffs one of
the largest national desks in the organisation and is one
of the biggest contributors of information to Europol
systems. We value our participation, and will continue to
play a role while we remain in the EU. The recent decision
to seek to opt into the new Europol measure is testament to
that.
As I said, our future practical co-operation will be
subject to negotiation, and it is too early to say what
shape our relationship with the agency will take after we
leave the EU. The models of co-operation enjoyed by other
countries, such as the US, illustrate the breadth of
agreements that can be achieved with Europol, but the UK
will be in a unique position as a former EU member with our
history of working with Europol, so we will not be looking
to replicate any other nation’s model.
The noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, raised the point that
while the report was in preparation a bespoke arrangement
was agreed for Denmark, and wanted to know more about it
and how relevant it might be for the UK’s future. Denmark’s
situation is different from the position that the UK will
be in once we leave the EU. It is a member state that does
not participate in the new Europol measure but is seeking a
special agreement from within the EU. Obviously, that
presents a different set of challenges for the parties
concerned. The Government are exploring options for Europol
once the UK has left the EU, but it is early to speculate
on what they might look like.
The noble Baroness and other noble Lords also asked about
the relevance of the 2014 opt-in decision. The justice and
home affairs opt-out in 2014 gave us the opportunity to
consider the value of certain measures to the UK. While
that decision provides a reference point, it is important
to be clear that the situation following the outcome of the
EU referendum means that the context is now different. To
state the obvious, we will no longer be a member of the EU
so, unlike the 2014 decision, the question now is not
whether we seek to rejoin certain measures as a member
state; instead, we need to consider how we should interact
with the EU security measures from outside the EU.
Quite a few noble Lords asked about Prüm in the context of
my right honourable friend in the other place.
During debate, he said that we were making new arrangements
for data-sharing. The Prime Minister has been clear that
one of her 12 negotiating objectives is to continue to work
with the EU to preserve European security, fight terrorism
and uphold justice across Europe. She is quite clear about
that. As part of the negotiations, we will discuss with the
EU and its member states how best to continue co-operation
on security, law enforcement and criminal justice.
The noble Baroness, Lady Prashar, also asked about what we
should read into the fact that the Government’s White Paper
says that in paragraph 12.2 the EU institutions are listed
among the entities that will be part of a “phased process
of implementation”. The Prime Minister has been clear that
she wants us,
“to have reached an agreement about our future partnership
by the time the two year Article 50 process has concluded.
From that point onwards, we”,
expect a,
“phased process of implementation, in which”,
Britain and the EU institutions and member states prepare
for the new arrangements that exist between us. It will,
“give businesses enough time to plan and prepare for those
new arrangements”.
It is in no one’s interests for there to be a cliff edge
for business or, indeed, for the rest of the country, as we
change from our existing relationship to a new partnership
with the EU, but that does not mean that we will seek some
form of unlimited transitional status. That would not be
good for Britain and it would not be good for the EU. As
the White Paper says,
“the interim arrangements we rely upon are likely to be a
matter of negotiation”.
The noble Baroness also talked about the precedents for
adjudication mechanisms and international arbitration in
trade agreements. Again, we need to negotiate the best deal
that we can for Europe, including thinking about the tools
and mechanisms for co-operation with EU member states.
The noble Baroness also asked about the great repeal Bill
and made the point about the Government’s intention that,
wherever practical and appropriate, the same rules and laws
will apply on the day after we leave the EU as they did
before. She asked about how I envisaged the process of
converting EU law into domestic law would work in the area
of criminal justice. All government departments are
currently reviewing the issues and opportunities arising
from exit, including the requirements for legislation in
addition to the great repeal Bill. We will bring forward a
White Paper on the Bill, which will set out our approach to
give effect to withdrawal on the domestic statute book, and
we will ensure that it is published in sufficient time to
allow Parliament to digest its contents in advance of
introduction of the Bill in the next Session.
The noble Baroness also asked about Article 50
negotiations. Under Article 50 of the Treaty on European
Union, the arrangements relating to the UK’s withdrawal are
to be made between the UK and the EU in a withdrawal
treaty. The content of the treaty will be a matter for
negotiation and our efforts will be focused on getting the
best deal possible for the UK in negotiations with the EU.
The noble Lord, , made the point about
needing to have a special relationship with the EU and
needing new mechanisms for co-operation. As the Government
have made clear, one of the 12 objectives of the
negotiations ahead will be to establish a new relationship
which enables the UK and the EU to continue practical
co-operation with other member states to tackle
cross-border crime and keep our people safe. We are in a
unique position; we are a valued partner in the EU and have
played a leading role in the development of a number of the
EU’s security measures that are in place. That is why we
will not be following any other nation’s model.
The noble Lord also asked how we will operate outside the
ECJ’s jurisdiction. The Prime Minister has been absolutely
clear that after withdrawal—as the noble Baroness, Lady
Ludford, articulated—our laws will not be made in Brussels
but in Westminster, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast. The
judges interpreting those laws will not sit in Luxembourg
but in courts in this country. The authority of EU law in
Britain will end. Until we exit the EU, we remain a full
member of the Union and the CJEU will continue its work.
The noble Lord, , talked about
sovereignty versus security and suggested that we face a
choice between the two. That is possibly overly simplistic.
The UK is in a unique starting position, and we will need
to negotiate the best deal we can with Europe while
recognising that this process will not be brief or
straightforward.
The noble Lord, Lord O’Neill, asked how we will secure a
good enough relationship on Europol—that is, better than
other third countries. We absolutely value the role of
Europol in helping law enforcement agencies to co-ordinate
investigation on cross-border crime but, looking ahead, we
need to negotiate the best deal we can with Europe. We are
in a unique position, but it is very early to speculate on
what that will look like.
The noble and learned Lord, ,
made the point that the EAW is worth signing up to the ECJ
and surrendering sovereignty for. As always, he set out a
typically forensic and well-informed analysis on the
question of sovereignty and the UK’s future relationship
with the EU, especially as pertaining to the European
arrest warrant. I listened carefully to what he said, but
it is too early to speculate at this stage on exactly what
our relationship with the ECJ will be after we leave the
EU.
The noble Lord, Lord Kirkhope, asked how we create a
flexible future relationship with the EU. Are we
underestimating the challenge of doing so? However, as the
Prime Minister has made clear, one of the 12 objectives for
the negotiations ahead will be to establish a new
relationship which enables the UK and the EU to continue
practical co-operation with other member states to tackle
cross-border crime and keep our people safe.
The noble Lord, , talked about
trafficking and drugs and the fact that crime is
international. In the modern age, we must cede some
sovereignty and work with international institutions. I
refer back to my answer to the point made by the noble
Lord, , on sovereignty versus
security not being a binary choice. The Prime Minister has
been clear that, after withdrawal, our laws will be made in
Westminster, Cardiff, Edinburgh and Belfast, and the judges
interpreting those laws will sit not in Luxembourg but in
courts in this country.
The noble Lord, Lord Davies, identified the value of SIS
II, Prüm and the EAW. He asked what is stopping us from
remaining part of these and if there is nothing why the
Government do not want us to join them. The UK’s exit from
the EU will put us in a unique position, seeking
co-operation on security and law enforcement as a former EU
member. We must now work with the EU to agree the way we
co-operate on both security and law enforcement after we
leave. Although the Government are absolutely committed to
future co-operation, I cannot set out a unilateral position
ahead of negotiations.
The noble Lord, Lord Hannay, talked of the risk of a cliff
edge on the day we leave, with no plan B. We need to agree
budgetary contribution and dispute resolution and we need a
living solution to avoid a static relationship. The noble
Lord identified some of the issues that would need to be
considered before and during the negotiations. The UK and
the EU have a shared interest in effective co-operation
while we remain a member state and after we leave, and the
negotiations will need to consider the full range of
options. It will be in all our interests to avoid any cliff
edge in negotiating with the EU. We will need to reach
agreement on a range of matters such as dispute resolution,
and we will seek a relationship that is capable of
responding to the changing threats that we face.
I am running out of time and I have three more noble Lords
to respond to, which I will do in writing. In fact, it is
two noble Lords—the noble Lord, , and the noble
Lord, , in respect of his
final point.
The Government recognise the challenge in negotiating a new
relationship. However, we are absolutely committed to
finding innovative solutions to enable us to continue to
work together to keep our citizens safe and to achieve
collective security in Europe and globally. Finally, I
again thank all noble Lords who have taken part in the
debate, particularly the noble Baroness, Lady Prashar.
10.25 pm
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My Lords, I thank the Minister for her response. It is
reassuring to hear that the Government are committed to
effective co-operation on these issues. The expertise
around the House on this issue was very evident in the
wonderful contributions to the debate. I very much hope
that the Government pay heed, consult and talk to people
who have that expertise when they proceed with their
negotiations. That said, I thank everybody who has
supported this debate.
Motion agreed.
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