The House of Lords Constitution Committee has today proposed new
measures to safeguard the rights of Parliament as the process of
Brexit gets underway. The report argues that Parliament should make
sure the Government does not use delegated powers in the
forthcoming ‘Great Repeal Bill’ as a way of changing the law in
areas currently governed by the EU, without proper parliamentary
scrutiny.
The Committee, which rarely considers
Government Bills before they are published, considers the issues
likely to be raised by the Bill to be exceptional, for which
exceptional scrutiny measures will be
required.
The Committee considers that, given the deadlines
imposed by the timing of the UK’s exit from the EU, the Bill is
likely to include wide-ranging delegated powers. These will
permit the Government to make a broad range of changes via
secondary legislation to the body of EU law in preparation for
its conversion into UK law. These powers will be required both
because of the sheer number of changes required and the
uncertainty as to what exactly the process of converting EU law
into UK law will eventually entail. The Government will also need
to be able to amend that law at short notice to take account of
the outcome of Brexit negotiations.
The Committee draws a distinction between, firstly,
the conversion of EU law into UK law, a process which will be
facilitated by the ‘Great Repeal Bill’, and, secondly, a
subsequent discretionary process in which the Government and
Parliament choose which bits of EU law to keep and which to
replace or modify. The ‘Great Repeal Bill’ should not be used as
a shortcut by the Government to pick and choose which provisions
of EU law it wishes to keep and which to lose. If the Government
wants to change the law in areas which currently fall under the
authority of EU as, just to give one example, it has said it
intends to do on immigration, it should do so via primary
legislation which is subject to full Parliamentary
scrutiny.
The Committee argues that Parliament should seek to
limit the scope of the delegated powers contained in the Bill,
and develop several new processes within Parliament to ensure
that the Government is using the delegated powers it acquires
under the Bill appropriately.
Firstly, the report states that Parliament
should limit the scope of delegated powers in the ‘Great Repeal
Bill’ so that they can be used only:
ï‚· so far as necessary to adapt the
body of EU law to fit the UK’s domestic legal framework;
and
ï‚· so far as necessary to implement the
result of the UK’s negotiations with the
EU.
Secondly, the Committee recommends that
enhanced scrutiny processes should be created for secondary
legislation laid under the ‘Great Repeal
Bill’. These include, among others, a requirement
that a Minister sign a declaration in respect of each statutory
instrument affirming that it does no more than necessary to
translate EU law into UK law. In addition, the Explanatory
Memorandum accompanying each instrument should explain what the
EU law in question currently does, the effect of any amendment
and why such amendment is necessary. This will allow Parliament
to have a proper say on this important legislation, rather than
simply being limited to approving or rejecting it as is now the
case.
The report also considers the impact of
repatriating EU laws in the devolved
administrations. The UK Government should consider
carefully and make clear the role it sees for the Scottish, Welsh
and Northern Irish Governments in preparing to incorporate EU law
in areas that will, following Brexit, fall within their
authority.
Commenting , Chairman of the House of
Lords Constitution Committee, said:
"The ‘Great Repeal Bill’ is likely to be an extremely
complicated piece of legislation. It will bring into UK law
legislation that is not currently on our statute book but that is
directly applicable to the UK. It will also provide for the
amendment of literally thousands of pieces of EU law that will
need to be adapted to make sense in a post-Brexit UK. No one
should underestimate the challenge of that process.
 
"The intention should be to convert the existing body
of EU law into UK law with as few changes as possible. The
Government may need to be granted wide-ranging powers to
accomplish that task. Those powers should not, however, be used
to pick and choose which elements of EU law to keep or
replace—that should be done only through primary legislation that
is subject to proper Parliamentary scrutiny.
"Scrutiny must not be side-lined. There must be: a
clear limit on what the delegated powers in the Bill can be used
to achieve; a requirement for Ministers to provide Parliament
with certain information when using those powers; and enhanced
Parliamentary scrutiny of the exercise of those powers. Use may
need to be made of sunset clauses to ensure that after Brexit the
laws brought over from the EU are reviewed and, if necessary,
amended without undue delay rather than being left to drift into
permanence.
"We feel that, taken together, these measures should
ensure that the cry of the Brexit campaign in the referendum,
that the UK Parliament should ‘take back control’, isn’t lost
before the UK has even left the EU."