Report published on the Withdrawal Agreement Bill

14 Jan 2020 02:31 PM

The Constitution Committee has published a report on the constitutional issues in the Government’s Withdrawal Agreement Bill. The Bill is of the highest constitutional significance, given its intended effect of implementing Brexit.

Background

The European Union (Withdrawal Act) Bill completed its House of Commons stages on 9 January and was introduced into the House of Lords later that day. Its second reading took place on 13 January and committee stage is expected to take place on 14-16 January. 

The Committee has scrutinised this Bill to complement the findings of the European Union Committee and the Delegated Power and Regulatory Reform Committee (DPRRC).

Key findings

The Committee has examined and made recommendations on several issues including:

Baroness Taylor, Chair of the Committee, yesterday said:

"The Government should reconsider the implications of clause 26 and the potential for significant legal uncertainty if lower courts are to be given the power to depart from previous CJEU caselaw and previous domestic interpretations of retained EU law. The Government should also provide for a sifting process for the scrutiny of instruments made under the bill, as recommended by the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee."

Further Information