HEWithout much of a stir, the British government took its controversial internal market bill to the next parliamentary hurdle. In the shadow of the debate over Corona’s new requirements, the House of Commons adopted a correction to the law Tuesday night. Originally, Conservative MPs wanted to push the amendment against the government, but Prime Minister Boris Johnson struck a deal with the rebels in time and eventually took office.
The correction stipulates that Parliament must vote again before the legislative passages of the Northern Ireland Protocol enter into force. These are criticized not only in the EU and by US presidential candidate Joe Biden, but also by much of the British Parliament. The government itself had admitted that the tickets violated the exit agreement with the EU and therefore “violated international law in a very special and limited way.”
Among other things, the law assigns the qualification of goods relevant to control and customs to British ministers when goods are exchanged between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, although these provisions must be jointly regulated in accordance with the treaty. Similar powers are given to the British government over the question of what state aid relevant to Northern Ireland to agree with Brussels.
In the next week, the law will be discussed further in the lower house before it is referred to the upper house. There is considerable resistance there, even if the government does not expect the “Lords” to stop enforcing the law. It is customary in Westminster that unelected members of the House of Lords do not impede laws by which the government redeems an electoral promise.
As the “Daily Telegraph” reports, Downing Street plans to have the law debated in the House of Lords for many weeks to maintain flexibility in negotiations with the EU. If there is a breakthrough, the government could eliminate the passages in Northern Ireland that Brussels has framed before the law is due to pass in December. The transition phase agreed in the exit agreement expires on December 31, and with it British membership of the EU internal market and the customs union.