UK bill to switch off Northern Ireland Brexit
rules clears first hurdle
Former PM Theresa May among Conservatives taking aim
at the UK plan.
BY CRISTINA
GALLARDO
June 28,
2022 12:27 am
LONDON —
The U.K.'s controversial plan to allow ministers to switch off post-Brexit
trade rules in Northern Ireland moved a step closer Monday night amid fresh
domestic criticism.
MPs voted
295 to 221 in favor of the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill, in a move that means
the proposed law will now proceed to line-by-line scrutiny at the committee
stage over three days.
But the
plan, already branded illegal by the European Union, earned a stinging rebuke
from former Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May, who described it as a
breach of international law that would "diminish the standing of the
United Kingdom in the eyes of the world."
The bill
would grant British ministers powers to ignore parts of the Northern Ireland
protocol, a central part of the Brexit divorce deal with the EU that was
designed to prevent a land border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of
Ireland, an EU member.
The
protocol keeps Northern Ireland inside the EU's single market, but means the
region must administer checks on goods arriving from the rest of the U.K. —
stipulations hated by some Northern Irish unionists and attacked by the British
government.
Foreign
Secretary Liz Truss insisted the U.K. had to legislate with urgency in order to
persuade Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) to return to the
power-sharing institutions it has boycotted since February.
But the
government's claim that a “doctrine of necessity” justifies the legislation
became one of the main lines of attack for critics of the bill in the House of
Commons.
Simon
Hoare, the Conservative chair of the Commons Northern Ireland affairs
committee, described the legislation as "a failure of statecraft"
that "puts at risk the reputation of the United Kingdom."
He told
MPs: “The arguments supporting it are flimsy at best, and irrational at worst …
How in the name of heaven can we expect to speak to others with authority when
we ourselves shun at a moment’s notice our legal obligations?”
Conservative
MP and former minister Andrew Mitchell, meanwhile, said many of those opposing
the plan are "extremely concerned that the bill brazenly breaks a solemn
international treaty, it trashes our international reputation, it threatens a
trade war at a time when our economy is flat and it puts us at odds with our
most important ally.”
Some of the
Conservatives most critical of the plan said they would abstain in Monday's
vote with a view to amending it in future stages.
MPs taking
aim at the proposed law argued that the U.K. has other options, including
further talks with the EU or triggering the existing Article 16 of the
protocol, which allows either side to temporarily suspend parts of the deal
under some circumstances.
Truss said
the government has not ruled out invoking Article 16 in the future, but for now
has concluded doing so will not resolve fundamental issues with the protocol
which the British government argues require a rewrite. Use of Article 16 would,
she said, only lead to “attrition and litigation” with the EU.
The bill
earned the support of a prominent bloc of Tory Brexiteers, however, including
former party leader Iain Duncan Smith, who urged ministers to pass the
legislation “come hell or high water.” The DUP also signaled its support, with
leader Jeffrey Donaldson saying his party would consider returning to the
power-sharing regional executive once the bill passes the Commons.
Donaldson
pointed out that the legislation could be sent to the House of Lords by
parliament's summer recess, but acknowledged its passage may then be blocked by
members of the U.K.'s upper chamber.
Boris
Johnson, speaking earlier at the G7 summit in Germany, said it may be possible
to enact the bill this year, “parliament willing," and expressed
satisfaction at the lack of a diplomatic row over Northern Ireland at the
meeting of world leaders.
“The
interesting thing is how little this conversation is being had, certainly
here,” the U.K. prime minister said.
That earned
a rebuke from Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin, who said in Dublin that
Johnson’s assessment “doesn’t stack up in the sense that any unilateral
decision to breach international law is a major, serious development.”
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