Professor
Steve Peers, University of Essex
After months of anticipation,
we finally know the shape of the law which would govern the UK’s ratification of
the revised
withdrawal agreement: the EU withdrawal agreement bill. (See also the explanatory notes on the bill, and further documents) The government wants this to be fast tracked in a few days,
in order to meet its deadline of October 31. This is an absurdly
hasty approach to parliamentary scrutiny of a bill which runs to 115 pages,
with 40 clauses and six schedules – especially given that the government has in
the meantime been compelled to request an extension of EU membership pursuant to
the Benn Act (discussed here).
It’s a complex bill,
and this blog post does not aim to be comprehensive: it’s a compilation of
selected first impressions (see also my Twitter
thread of initial reactions). Since the bill is closely related to the revised
withdrawal agreement, my earlier analyses of that agreement (overview;
transition
period; dispute
settlement; and citizens’
rights) may be relevant.
Approval
of the withdrawal agreement
First: the bill
switches off both the specific rules for approval of the withdrawal agreement
in the EU
Withdrawal Act (the so-called ‘meaningful vote’), and the general rules for
approval of international treaties in the Constitutional
Reform and Governance Act (CRAGA). The effect of this is that as soon as
the bill is passed, the government can ratify the withdrawal agreement without
holding a further vote.
The
transition period
As I noted in my
earlier analyses of the revised withdrawal agreement, the agreement in effect
creates a deferred no deal outcome – shifted from end October 2019 to end December
2020. That’s because the transition period set up in the agreement (which
ensures the continued application of EU law to the UK) ends in December 2020. Note,
however, that the provisions in the withdrawal agreement on citizens’ rights, the financial
settlement and Northern Ireland will not
expire at the end of the transition period. (In fact, for the most part
that’s when the provisions on citizens’ rights and Northern Ireland kick in).
The possible deferred no deal
outcome in December 2020 is therefore better described as a ‘no trade deal’
outcome. Can it be avoided, in the event that the UK and the EU have not
negotiated a further relationship treaty on trade by that time (as seems highly
likely)? Yes: it’s possible to extend that period by a period of one or two
years, subject to the agreement of both sides in the Joint Committee set up to
implement the agreement.
However, the
circumstances are somewhat different from the extension of EU membership by the UK. There’s no
underlying power to revoke the notification to leave any more. The decision can’t
be taken at the last minute, like the membership extension decisions, because
the withdrawal agreement requires the transition period extension decision to
be taken by 1 July 2020. Moreover, the transition period extension decision
requires a difficult negotiation on further UK contributions to the EU budget
(the scheduled end-2020 to terminate the transition period coincides with the
end of the EU multi-annual budget cycle).
In the bill, Parliament
has a role in extension of the transition period. It must approve any
government decision to extend it (as agreed with the EU). But there's no power
for Parliament to require the
government to make a request for an extension – and it’s government policy to
leave at the end of 2020. (In the event that an extension is agreed, the bill
would give effect to it by secondary legislation, similar to the EU Withdrawal
Act provisions on extension of EU membership.) There’s already one proposed
amendment by an MP to increase Parliament’s role; it will be important to
see if an amendment like this passes.
During the transition
period, the European
Communities Act, loathed by Eurosceptics because it's the main domestic
law basis for EU membership, comes back to life under the bill. The withdrawal
agreement says that the UK has to apply new EU measures (other than those
covered by UK opt outs) during the transition period, and there's provision in
the EU for parliamentary scrutiny of such new EU measures. But needless to say,
debating a motion on new EU measures in Westminster will have no impact on the
EU side – given that the UK will not have MEPs or ministers at the negotiating
table.
As a further measure to
pacify Eurosceptics, there’s a parliamentary sovereignty clause. which is presumably
intended to assert that Article 4 of the withdrawal agreement, which insists on
the supremacy of the agreement in domestic law, doesn't overturn the basic principles
of the UK constitution. There’s no small irony here, given that the
Eurosceptics in question rejoiced when the government recently unlawfully
suspended Parliament. In light of the Eurosceptics’ behaviour, Brexiting for
parliamentary sovereignty makes as much sense as dieting for obesity.
Implementing
the withdrawal agreement
There's a general
clause giving domestic legal effect to the rest of the withdrawal agreement
other than the transition period. This includes the citizens’ rights
provisions. I’ll focus on two aspects in more detail: citizens’ rights and
workers’ rights.
Citizens’
rights
The citizens’ rights
provision of the withdrawal agreement aim to preserve most of the same status
that EU27 citizens in the UK, and UK citizens in the EU27, have on the basis of
EU free movement law, if they moved before the end of the transition period in
the withdrawal agreement. The specific provisions in the main part of the bill
set out further powers for the government to implement it as regards: the
application deadline for EU27 citizens; frontier workers; restrictions of entry
and residence; grounds for deportation; appeals and judicial review;
recognition of professional qualifications; social security; non-discrimination;
and workers’ rights (in the context of free movement). All of these provisions
refer back to the withdrawal agreement; they are not general power to do
anything the government likes, even in breach of it.
The clause on the
application deadline would be a good place to insert an amendment to ensure
that EU citizens are not deported or subjected to any other detriment due
purely to missing the deadline. Furthermore the bill should be amended to
protect the position of those whom the UK is only protecting on a discretionary
basis (for instance, the non-EU family members of UK
citizens who return to the UK from an EU Member State, and those who are not
working but whom the UK considers do not have ‘comprehensive sickness insurance’
because they rely on the NHS.
In addition, the
withdrawal agreement requires the UK to set up an independent monitoring
authority for EU27 citizens’ rights. This is established in a schedule to the
bill. EU27 citizens can complain to this body about their treatment, and it can
launch inquiries or court proceedings as a follow-up. However, it might be
questioned whether the body is really independent, given the influence which
the Bill gives the Home Secretary over appointments. A better approach would be
appointments by an independent body or a parliamentary committee, or perhaps
adapting the model for judicial appointments.
Workers’
rights
Some Labour MPs have brought themselves to support the withdrawal
agreement based on promises for protection of worker’s rights. How substantial
are these – in light of the removal from the withdrawal agreement of the protection
for such standards (forming part of the UK-wide customs union backstop) in the earlier
version of the agreement?
According to the bill,
the government must release a statement as to whether a new bill goes below EU
standards on employment law or not. But it can still propose a bill even if it
drops below those standards. As for new
EU legislation on workers’ rights, the government must report on whether they
are higher than UK standards, and if so whether they intend to match them.
This leaves obvious
gaps: what about secondary legislation related to workers’ rights? What about
gaps between UK courts’ interpretation and the CJEU? And even the core
commitments are not very impressive – a sort of Potemkin village of apparently
solid promises which are actually empty facades. If Labour MPs fall for
this, I have a red flag in Florida I’d like to sell to them.
A more genuine
commitment would: rule out reduction of EU standards by means of secondary
legislation; require the UK courts to keep to any minimum standard set by the
CJEU unless an Act of Parliament requires otherwise, with the power for the
courts to go above that standard; and match new EU legislation on workers’
rights unless Parliament votes against
it (or at least, leave to Parliament the choice whether to match the new legislation
nor not).
Future
relationship
The bill regulates the future
relationship between the UK and the EU too. The government's negotiating
strategy must be approved by Parliament (it’s not explicit whether Parliament
could amend that strategy), and ratification of the resulting treaties must be
approved by Parliament, in much the same way as approval of the withdrawal
agreement under the EU Withdrawal Act. So we are promised more ‘meaningful
votes’ in future – assuming that there are any treaties with the EU to approve.
But there’s a catch:
any negotiating guidelines have to be ‘consistent with the political declaration’
on the future relationship, which suggests that this non-binding agreement between
the UK and the EU attains a sort of binding effect in domestic law. But this
declaration rules certain things out, such as a customs union or single market
relationship. So, to paraphrase Henry Ford, the government is telling Parliament
that it can vote for any negotiation strategy it likes – as long as it’s blue.
We can expect
amendments to the bill on this issue, including on the question of a customs
union. It has been argued that the opposition parties who want a different relationship
with the EU should just roll over on this point and wait to win an election.
But we had an election in 2017 – in which
the future relationship with the EU was an issue. Those who voted for the
opposition parties then voted for manifestos promising to support a close
relationship with the EU; so why shouldn’t the opposition parties try to amend
the bill to give effect to these preferences? After all, the government chose
to hold an early election on the issue of Brexit, and lost its majority.
This goes back to underlying
themes in the Brexit debate. Supporters of the government’s notion of One True
Brexit gloss over that at various times this One True Brexit – which ‘everyone
knew they were voting for’ – has constituted the first withdrawal agreement,
the revised withdrawal agreement, and no deal at all. The government blames its likely inability to achieve its Brexit objectives by the end of October on judges
judging, Remainers moaning, Parliament legislating, and the EU parking the bus
in the Irish Sea. But at the root here is voters
voting: depriving the government of its majority in an election in which
they were asked about Brexit policy.
Barnard & Peers:
chapter 27
Photo credit: Jonathan
Joseph Bondhus
A very helpful overview. Thank you
ReplyDelete