Rees-Mogg lambasts critics of EU laws bill after
quitting government
Former business secretary tells opponents of bill they
are fighting a Brexit battle all over again
Lisa
O'Carroll Brexit correspondent
@lisaocarroll
Tue 25 Oct
2022 17.27 BST
The former
business secretary Jacob Rees-Mogg launched a scathing attack on opponents of
legislation he has tabled to sweep away EU law, telling them they are fighting
a Brexit battle all over again.
Rees-Mogg
quit his role after Rishi Sunak became prime minister, and less than two hours
later returned to the backbenches to see a stand-in, the business minister Dean
Russell, opening the second reading of the retained EU law (revocation and
reform) bill.
Rees-Mogg
told MPs the proposals were aimed at “restoring parliamentary sovereignty” and
helping remove rules and regulations that supposedly put business under
pressure.
In an
extraordinary backbench spat, he accused a fellow Conservative MP of never
accepting the result of Brexit, leading Richard Graham to demand the former
minister withdraw the “untrue” statement.
Graham had
objected to the speed with which the bill proposes to get rid of 2,400 laws.
Through a sunset clause, laws that have not been actively saved by a government
minister will automatically be switched off on 31 December 2023 under
Rees-Mogg’s bill.
The shadow
business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, told the house the bill was “not
conducive to good laws”, saying the sunset clause “puts a gun to parliament’s
head”.
The
Scottish National party spokesperson Brendan O’Hara urged the new prime
minister to scrap the bill, describing it as the “unwanted puppy that no one
would particularly want in the first place that no one really cares for” given
as a present by a man who has “flounced” out the door.
Rees-Mogg
said the bill was about Britain taking back control, not about the process of
law-making. “We are restoring parliamentary sovereignty,” he said. “This bill
is first of all of fundamental constitutional importance because it is removing
the supremacy of EU law.”
The bill
has been sharply criticised by legal experts, who have said it gives ministers
unprecedented and “undemocratic” powers to make or ditch laws without any
consultation.
Unions,
worried it could trigger a wave of deregulation of workers’ rights, say it is a
“countdown to disaster”, while the Green party MP Caroline Lucas told MPs the
bill was irresponsible and “ideologically driven”.
Rees-Mogg
denied the government wanted to dilute workers’ rights or environmental
protections. The government was not about to send “children up chimneys”, he
said.
Russell,
who was forced to step in for Rees-Mogg after his resignation, said the bill
was designed to create “a more agile and innovative regulatory” regime that
would “benefit people and businesses across the UK” and would “help us sweep
away outdated and obsolete EU legislation, paving the way for future frameworks
better suited to the needs of the UK”.
Reynolds
denounced the bill, telling the house Labour’s opposition was “not about
Brexit” but about the “power to sweep away” laws the government was conferring
on ministers. “This bill risks diminishing democratic scrutiny and
accountability in key areas of British law,” he said.
The former
Brexit select committee chair Hilary Benn asked: “What is the justification for
allowing ministers to scrap legislation that currently applies simply by doing
nothing? Because of the sunset clause? I’ve never seen anything like it
before.”
Labour’s
Stella Creasy said she had been told in an answer to a parliamentary question
that the list of laws on the government dashboard was “not comprehensive”,
fuelling fears legislation could disappear accidentally.
The bill,
she said, included the entire body of laws governing aircraft safety,
cancer-causing ingredients in cosmetics, compensation for delayed trains and
planes, and workers’ rights.
There were
also signs of unease on the government benches with the former environment
minister Rebecca Pow saying a review of “something like 572 laws relating to
the Defra portfolio whether it’s sewage pollution, waste, water, air,
pesticides” over just 15 months was a “very short time”. She urged the
government to consider extending the sunset clause to 2026.
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