Jacob Rees-Mogg is plotting to change thousands
of laws under cover of Tory chaos
George
Peretz
A bill sweeping aside EU law doesn’t just threaten our
rights, it tells business that critical legislation is subject to ministerial
whims
Tue 25 Oct
2022 09.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/oct/25/eu-law-britain-crisis-jacob-rees-mogg
“Retained
EU law” is something that sounds interesting only to legal geeks. But it
matters, and Jacob Rees-Mogg’s plans to sweep aside 47 years’ worth of these
laws – set out in a bill due to be debated by the Commons on Tuesday – matter a
lot.
Until
Brexit, UK law was heavily influenced by our membership of the EU. So when we
left, Theresa May’s government drew up legislation – the EU Withdrawal Act – to
keep most laws in place until parliament decided to replace them, both to avoid
huge gaps and to keep very important rights and protections.
The
Rees-Mogg bill does three things. First, it repeals all that law (except for
law incorporated into an act of parliament) in one fell swoop on 31 December
2023, unless ministers decide to rescue any of it, or delay the repeal. That means
that rights and protections such as (to give only a few examples) caps on your
working hours, your rights if your employer is sold, the ban on selling
cosmetics tested on animals, protections of environmentally sensitive sites and
your rights to compensation if your flight is cancelled all vanish unless
ministers decide to keep them – and ministers can decide to let them disappear
without any consultation or parliamentary scrutiny whatsoever.
Second, it
gives ministers huge powers to replace those rules with new rules, without any
need to consult those affected and usually without any vote in parliament – and
when there is a vote it will be a yes/no vote, after one short debate, and
under the threat that the rules will vanish completely if parliament says “no”.
The only limit on ministers’ powers is that the new rules cannot increase
“burdens”: which means that they can’t be used to improve rights and
protections but only to remove them – and all the rights I listed above, and
countless others, will be vulnerable to gutting by ministerial fiat.
The
arguments put forward for the bill should be unconvincing even to Brexiters.
Vote Leave was keen to tell voters that rights and protections found in EU law
would stay and that any changes to them would be made democratically and by
parliament. The real basis for the bill – apart from grabbing power to slash
rights and protections without proper scrutiny – is a form of bigotry: the
prejudice that because law comes from the EU it is necessarily bad and that it
is so important to cleanse it from the UK statute book that normal democratic
processes should be suspended; and that replacement rules should be made
without taking the time to make sure that they work and do not have unintended
consequences. Like all bigotry, that prejudice is unsupported by any coherent
analysis.
The bill is
grossly undemocratic in its contempt for public and parliamentary scrutiny. But
it is also profoundly anti-growth. There is always scope for improving and
updating regulation. But getting it right, in a complex world, requires
thought, consultation and challenge. What the bill does is to tell business
that critical legislation of huge importance to them is subject to arbitrary ministerial
repeal or rushed and unscrutinised rewriting, and that what remains will be
deliberately thrown into uncertainty.
As the keen
Brexiter George Eustice said while attempting to defeat this proposal when he
was in government, “messing around” with regulation in this way “costs
businesses money and is unlikely to make much difference”. Put more bluntly and
more accurately, it is hard to think of any message that could be more
calculated to put business off investing in the UK.
Rees-Mogg’s
bill is bad for our democracy and bad for our economy. Labour has said it will
oppose it, and all MPs – including Conservative MPs who supported Brexit –
should vote it down.
George
Peretz KC is a barrister at Monckton Chambers, specialising in public,
regulatory and competition law
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