The British government has
refused withdrawal of legislation that breaks a legally binding Brexit treaty,
despite a resounding rejection of the bill by the upper house of Parliament.
The
House of Lords voted by large margins to strip from the Internal Market Bill
clauses that give the government power to break sections of the divorce
agreement it signed with the European Union before the U.K. left the bloc in
January. Britain PM acknowledged that the bill breaches international law, and
the legislation has been condemned by the EU, U.S. President-elect Joe Biden
and scores of British lawmakers, including many from Johnson’s Conservative
Party.
Former
Conservative leader Michael Howard, a member of the Lords, said he was
“dismayed” by the bill and urged the government to think again. But the
government said it would restore the rejected sections when the bill returns to
the House of Commons in the coming weeks. The statement reveals the bill is
needed as an insurance policy to ensure smooth trade among all parts of the
U.K. — especially Northern Ireland, which shares a border with the EU — no
matter what happens to U.K.-EU trade after Brexit. In a statement released by
the Government, the authorities said, “We have been consistently clear that the
clauses represent a legal safety net to protect the integrity of the U.K.’s
internal market and the huge gains of the (Northern Ireland) peace process”. On
January 31, 2020, the Britain has left the EU’s political structures but
remained in its economic embrace until a transition period that would end
December 31, 2020. The two sides are trying to strike a new trade deal, but
talks are stuck on key issues, and have been soured further by the Internal
Market Bill.