A truncated parliamentary session, less than 48 hours before the end of the transition period, was too little, too late

In a damning assessment of Wednesday’s token debate on Boris Johnson’s Brexit trade deal, the Hansard Society’s senior researcher dismissed it as “a farce.” As one of the most depressing and shambolic periods in British political history reaches a denouement, perhaps that should have come as no surprise.

MPs were allotted five hours to discuss the 1,246-page treaty, agreed last week, which completes Britain’s departure from the European Union. Such a derisory level of scrutiny, said Hansard’s Brigid Fowler, was “an abdication of parliament’s constitutional responsibilities.” Exuding insouciance, the leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg, quickly revealed the government’s contempt for such notions. The risibly short session, he told MPs, was merely the “icing on the Christmas cake that the prime minister delivered for the nation”. So much, then, for the restoration of parliamentary sovereignty, the lodestar that supposedly guided the Brexit project. In the absence of any alternative, bar a disastrous no-deal exit on New Year’s Day, the European Union (future relationship) bill was rushed through by a majority of 448. Cognisant of its myriad flaws, Mr Johnson had good grounds for wanting it to be waved through on the fly.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘The new dementia tax’: Truss’s U-turn is first real howler of Tory leadership race

Analysis: Truss’s misjudgement earns her comparisons to Theresa May in blunder critics…

F1 British Grand Prix: red flag after early crash at Silverstone – live updates

Alfa Romeo’s Zhou Guanyu conscious after crash George Russell involved in collision…

Galaxy S21+ review: the big-screen Samsung phone for slightly less

Top chips, good camera and four-year support make for a lot of…

The supreme court’s blow to US affirmative action is no coincidence | Eddie R Cole

The court’s ruling reflects a decades-long drive to return higher education to…

A truncated parliamentary session, less than 48 hours before the end of the transition period, was too little, too late

In a damning assessment of Wednesday’s token debate on Boris Johnson’s Brexit trade deal, the Hansard Society’s senior researcher dismissed it as “a farce.” As one of the most depressing and shambolic periods in British political history reaches a denouement, perhaps that should have come as no surprise.

MPs were allotted five hours to discuss the 1,246-page treaty, agreed last week, which completes Britain’s departure from the European Union. Such a derisory level of scrutiny, said Hansard’s Brigid Fowler, was “an abdication of parliament’s constitutional responsibilities.” Exuding insouciance, the leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg, quickly revealed the government’s contempt for such notions. The risibly short session, he told MPs, was merely the “icing on the Christmas cake that the prime minister delivered for the nation”. So much, then, for the restoration of parliamentary sovereignty, the lodestar that supposedly guided the Brexit project. In the absence of any alternative, bar a disastrous no-deal exit on New Year’s Day, the European Union (future relationship) bill was rushed through by a majority of 448. Cognisant of its myriad flaws, Mr Johnson had good grounds for wanting it to be waved through on the fly.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Pádraig Harrington says American fans will put pressure on US Ryder Cup team

‘Home captain has to deal with stress,’ says European skipper Six Ryder…

‘Happy hours … for now’: what the papers say about Britain emerging from lockdown

Front pages celebrate easing of restrictions but they all deliver a health…

UK energy prices are giving the surest signal of an expensive winter

If there is a political plan to manage a possible crisis –…