“N.I. Protocol subjugates UK’s fundamental constitutional foundation,” says Kate Hoey

Baroness Hoey reveals the flaws and absurdities in the N.I. Protocol Bill in major speech

Montage © Facts4EU.Org 2022

A summary of where we are and what Baroness Hoey had to say

Readers may be forgiven for wondering what is happening with the Government’s policy to deal with the problems of the EU’s Northern Ireland Protocol. Immediate action has been promised on many occasions but thus far there is little to show for it.

Against this background we explain where things have got to as well as presenting excerpts from Baroness Kate Hoey’s intervention in a Committee of the House of Lords.

Background

Put simply, the EU’s N.I. Protocol divides the United Kingdom. Not only does it impose a border in the middle of the Irish Sea, it also means citizens of the United Kingdom are living under the laws of a foreign power, with no say over these laws and no say over any future laws which may be passed.

Much has been said about the effects of the N.I. Protocol on trade – and these have been severe – but it is the constitutional question which trumps everything. The Protocol has split the UK and it has broken the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement which has guaranteed peace for decades.

In the absence of the EU negotiating sensibly, the Government finally introduced its ‘Northern Ireland Protocol Bill’ which passed in the House of Commons this summer with no amendments, after which it went to the Lords where it is progressing through the grindingly slow process of Committee and Report stages, before being sent back to the Commons.

The Bill would give ministers delegated powers to change which parts of the N.I. Protocol would be ‘excluded provision’ in domestic law. They would also have delegated powers to make new law in connection with the Protocol, such as on the movement and regulation of goods.

Baroness Hoey’s proposed amendment to the Bill

During the final stage of the Lord’s Committee proceedings, Baroness Hoey introduced a key amendment to Clause 22 of the proposed Bill. Clause 22 is one of the most significant in the Bill and sets out the general scope and nature of the powers available to ministers. As she explains :-

“This amendment prevents a Minister of the Crown making provision by regulation which has the effect of repealing, subordinating or otherwise interfering with the United Kingdom’s foundational constitutional statutory framework.”

No one is better versed in the history and detail of Northern Ireland politics than the noble Baroness and we quote extensively from her speech to the House of Lords in the article below.

Brexit Facts4EU.Org Summary

Excerpts from Baroness Hoey’s speech

“This amendment is very simple.
It seeks to remedy an important gap at the heart of the Bill.”

The amendment she seeks in Clause 22 is to insert the words :

“but may not amend, repeal, or create an incompatibility with, the Act of Union (Ireland) 1800 or the Union with Ireland Act 1800.”

Act Of Union Under Threat

Fears that present arrangements could endanger the present constitutional status of Northern Ireland appear well founded. According to Baroness Hoey:-

“The Prime Minister before the previous Prime Minister, speaking in the House of Commons, claimed that the withdrawal Act was not intended to affect the Acts of Union, yet a few months later senior counsel, on behalf of the then Government, went to court in our protocol case in Belfast and argued exactly the opposite.”

Nor historically, she argues, has subordinate legislation ever challenged the integrity of the Acts of Union:

“The 1920 Act simply made provision for separate devolved arrangements in two parts of Ireland, each of which remained fully part of the United Kingdom and subject to the United Kingdom Parliament. There was and is nothing in the Acts of Union to prevent the creation of subordinate legislatures, provided that the King in Parliament remains sovereign.”

The Protocol Must Yield to the Act Of Union

Where a conflict between the Protocol and the Act of Union arises, Baroness Hoey is emphatic about which needs to give way:

“While this Bill may well conflict with international obligations under the protocol, any such obligations must yield because the protocol subjugates the fundamental constitutional foundation of the United Kingdom.”

Flaws in the Current Bill

If the Bill were to stand in its present form, she argues, the dangers are obvious:

“The bill as it currently stands has a hole in it. it does not prevent a Minister of a Crown using the Henry VIII powers that we have heard so much about to replace the current arrangements with new arrangements that would again breach the Acts of Union.”

Logical Absurdity

As things currently stand, a Minister of the Crown is prohibited from doing anything to facilitate or create a land border where it should be but remains free to do so within the UK itself thereby subjugating the Acts of Union.

“That simply is an absurdity. I know that the Minister could not really give a reason why this had not gone in but I trust—being very naive, perhaps—that it was simply an oversight on the part of the drafters.

“Let us be clear: the restoration means an end of EU law applying in Northern Ireland. If it continues to apply in Northern Ireland but not in the rest of the United Kingdom then the Acts of Union are breached.”

Brussels and Dublin

In her concluding remarks, Baroness Hoey exposed one final, glaring anomaly.

“Last week, after a lot of procrastination, the Northern Ireland Office ruled out law-making powers over Northern Ireland for Dublin. It did so correctly, on the basis that this would breach the principle of consent.

“Can the Government therefore explain how they reconcile the plainly correct position that law-making powers being handed to Dublin would breach the principle of consent with their continued entirely illogical claim that handing law-making and judicial powers to Brussels does not?

“What, tell me, is the difference between Brussels exercising law-making powers over Northern Ireland and Dublin doing the same? In truth, I do not think that there is any coherent answer to that.”

Conclusion

The noble Baroness’s concluding observations are clear and unambiguous:-

  • Amending Clause 22 would provide some constitutional safeguard against the obvious loop-holes which currently exist
  • There can be no power sharing in Northern Ireland unless Unionists are treated with the same respect as Nationalists
  • Either those rights are respected or there will be no power sharing

“There can be no compromise on that fundamental issue.”

Observations

We are grateful to Baroness Hoey for her time in discussing the Northern Ireland Protocol with the Facts4EU.Org and CIBUK.Org teams, and for providing our readers with a powerful insight on the present impasse.

Both the Facts4EU.Org and CIBUK.Org teams will do their best to impress on those in government the importance of the points Baroness Hoey raises. Facts4EU.Org has always opposed the Northern Ireland Protocol and we continue to believe it should be removed in its entirety. We are also offering our support to the Unionist parties in Northern Ireland.

Readers can find a great many reports about Northern Ireland by viewing our Brexit Index – the world’s largest repository of facts about UK-EU relations and Brexit.

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[ Sources: Baroness Hoey of Lylehill and Rathlin | Hansard | House of Lords Library ] Politicians and journalists can contact us for details, as ever.

Brexit Facts4EU.Org, Sat 26 Nov 2022

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