Asked by Lord Spicer To ask Her Majesty’s Government when
they will next report to Parliament on the progress of negotiations
with the European Union with regard to Brexit. The Minister of
State, Department for Exiting the European Union (Baroness Anelay
of St Johns) (Con) My Lords, on Tuesday, the Government made
a Statement to the House of Commons on progress made in both the
July and...Request free trial
Asked by
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To ask Her Majesty’s Government when they will next report to
Parliament on the progress of negotiations with the European
Union with regard to Brexit.
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The Minister of State, Department for Exiting the European
Union (Baroness Anelay of St Johns) (Con)
My Lords, on Tuesday, the Government made a Statement to the
House of Commons on progress made in both the July and August
negotiation rounds, which I repeated in this Chamber. The
Secretary of State made a clear commitment to give an update
to the House of Commons after each round of negotiations.
With the leave of this House, it will also be repeated here.
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(Con)
Will my noble friend confirm that when we leave the European
Union on 19 March 2019, the jurisdiction of all the bodies
throughout Europe that have governing powers will cease, that
that is the essence of Brexit, and that the rest of the
issues are consequential and could be settled in their own
time?
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My noble friend has raised questions which I am sure will
occupy this House with great interest and elicit
investigation over the period until we do leave the European
Union. He raises a crucial point that in leaving the European
Union, we take back control of our own laws, and this is
about how we do that and the pace at which we do it. We have
made it clear that, for example, the direct jurisdiction of
the Court of Justice of the European Union will end as we
leave the European Union. But another place is currently
discussing the withdrawal Bill, which makes it clear that
there would still be some role for the CJEU, for example in
pending cases. It is a complex matter and my noble friend is
right to raise it.
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(Lab)
My Lords, given the timescales, there will be important
negotiations during recesses. Our EU Committee asked the
Secretary of State to report back during the Summer Recess,
and was clear that if he was unable to attend on the
particular date it offered, it would be happy to hear from
another Minister, the Permanent Secretary or the Permanent
Representative. The invitation was declined—not just for that
date but until October. Yet the Secretary of State found time
to be part of the entertainment at the Edinburgh Festival, as
a guest of . This is a question of
priorities, and that shows more respect for the comedy fringe
than it does for Parliament. Is it right that Ministers can
ignore Parliament in this way throughout any recess,
particularly when it is the Government who choose the recess
dates?
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My Lords, the Government have not ignored Parliament. We made
clear at the beginning of the process, when the British
public decided they wanted to leave the European Union, that
there would be regular reporting to Parliament. Indeed, what
we do is far beyond what is available to the European
Parliament, in effect, because we make available Statements,
debates and Questions in which all parliamentarians may
participate. In addition, in just the 15 months since my own
department was founded, the Secretary of State appeared
before the EU Committee on 11 July and, as the noble Baroness
said, of course he plans to attend very shortly. He has also
provided evidence to the Select Committee on Exiting the
European Union in another place on two occasions, and will
appear before that committee when it has been re-established.
In those 15 months, there have been a further 14 occasions
where my department’s Ministers and officials have given
evidence to a wide range of committees. We continue with our
commitment to engage fully with Select Committees. There are
various ways in which we can do that, and I very much look
forward to discussing those matters in detail with individual
committees and their chairs.
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(Con)
My Lords, does my noble friend think that there is any
prospect that when the Government report on the negotiations
to this House and to the other place, we will not see the
same speeches made by the same people who are still fighting
the referendum campaign and trying to reverse the result
brought about by the British people?
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Immediately after the result of the referendum last year,
when I said that I had voted to remain, I also said that when
democracy makes a decision you accept it and move on. My
noble friend is right.
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(LD)
My Lords, we are moving from general principle to detail on
the negotiations now, and it is the detail that we find
extremely difficult. I remember that before we joined the
single market, when Mrs Thatcher was negotiating it, a study
demonstrated that, actually, the British accepted US
regulation in domestic law as a matter of course, because we
had to accept international regulation on a whole host of
things. We are now discovering about the detail, and if we
are leaving the EU both Houses need to be kept informed on
the question of which international regulations we accept,
and how we proceed, on everything from blood supplies to
airline regulation. Many lobbies will be extremely
interested, and that is the hard stuff that we need to be
kept informed about. Can the Minister give us some
reassurance?
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The noble Lord is absolutely right about how crucial it is
that, as negotiations progress and there is more of a
convergence of agreement about what is, as he says, very
detailed technical information about the status of
regulations after Brexit, we are able to transmit that
information. I assure him that that is what we have sought to
do throughout the summer. One brief example is provided by
the common position paper, published by both the EU
Commission and the UK, on our negotiations on the status of
citizens. Clearly a wide range of issues, including highly
technical ones, are involved, and after the August round we
updated the online convergence annexe immediately and made
sure the information was in this House. That really shows how
we are trying to transmit that detail. But I do not
underestimate the complexity or the amount of detail that I
know the House will wish to scrutinise.
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(CB)
My Lords, does the Minister recognise that the issue of
periodicity of reporting, which the noble Lord, , raised, is not the
only one at stake? There is also, of course, the content of
the reports, which up to now has left something to be
desired—and also the ability of this House, when the report
is made, to have more than the time that is made available
when a ministerial Statement is made. Will the Minister
consult the usual channels to see whether, in the case of
Brexit, which is a matter of huge interest to all parts of
this House, the time allowed for discussion following a
ministerial Statement on the progress of the negotiations is
a bit longer than is allowed on a normal one?
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My Lords, I think there are many views around the House about
how noble Lords wish to participate in the scrutiny of these
matters. A Statement is, as the noble Lord, Lord Hannay,
said, just one method. There are indeed occasions when the
usual channels can arrange debate, and I thank my noble
friend the Captain of the Gentlemen-at-Arms for being so
generous as to put time on the Order Paper next Tuesday so
that this House can examine the position papers at length.
That is a measure of the generosity of the Government; I hope
that it will be met in good spirit, and not undermined by
others.
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