Following
the Government’s defeat in the High Court over its exclusive right to trigger
Article 50, the EU’s exit clause, what could happen next? Stephen Booth assesses
the fallout.Firstly, Prime Minister Theresa May’s plan to trigger
Article 50 by the end of March 2017 is still possible. The Government has said
it will appeal to the Supreme Court, which is expected to hear the case on 7
December and presumably rule by early January. If the Government wins its
appeal, it can continue with Plan A and trigger Article 50 of its own
accord.
However, there is a very real chance that the Government could
lose again on appeal. This would mean Parliament will vote on whether Article 50
can be triggered.
If
Government loses, legislation is likely to be necessarySome
have argued that, since a legal fight was always a possibility, why didn’t the
Government head this off early by calling a simple parliamentary vote on a
motion to trigger Article 50 and move on? Well,
the
reasoning of today’s ruling illustrates that, if the claimants’
argument holds (which regards rights stemming from EU membership set down in
parliamentary legislation), the courts were never likely to be satisfied by
anything short of legislation to trigger Article 50. Therefore, a simple vote on
a motion to trigger Article 50 could have resulted in a similar challenge to
that we are witnessing now.
The obvious reason for the Government to want
to avoid enacting legislation to trigger Article 50 is that this can be a
time-consuming process, frustrated by delays or amendments within either the
House of Commons or the House of Lords. This is now the prospect facing the
Government if it loses on appeal, and therefore its end-March deadline could be
at risk.
Parliamentary
moves to block Article 50 trigger would be politically
explosiveIt is very hard to believe that a majority of MPs in
the House of Commons would actually move to ‘block’ Brexit by preventing the
Government triggering Article 50, especially having voted to give the public the
opportunity to vote to leave the EU in the referendum. Even those MPs who have
publicly backed the legal challenge have said they do not intend to prevent
Brexit or reverse the referendum result. Despite there being a majority of MPs
for Remain going into the referendum, as research by political scientist
Chris
Hanretty has noted, “421 out of 574 English and Welsh constituencies
probably voted to Leave.” MPs in both parties and on both sides of the
referendum campaign are acutely aware of this.
The same is probably true
for the House of Lords, which would create a full-blown constitutional crisis if
it opposed Article 50 outright. Nevertheless, this begs the question what those
MPs or Lords which have most vociferously campaigned for parliamentary approval
of Article 50 intend to do.
Parliament’s
leverage over process is far greater than over any negotiating mandate or
outcomeMany MPs have been demanding more information about the
Government’s negotiating priorities and greater scrutiny by Parliament of the
Article 50 negotiations once they are underway. This is likely to be the focus
of any parliamentary tussles over legislation to trigger Article 50, with MPs
and Lords seeking to amend the Bill to give them greater and more formal powers
to scrutinise the process. Some may also seek to commit the Government to
domestic legislation to guarantee various things, for example the rights of EU
nationals in the UK. And, once this can of worms is opened, don’t be surprised
if some MPs who backed Leave also come up with their own
demands.
Parliament will be on much weaker ground, though, when it comes
to fundamental questions about what Brexit means – whether the UK Government
seeks to remain in the EU’s customs union or single market, for example.
Parliament can demand what it likes about its role in scrutinising the process
of the Article 50 talks but it cannot mandate any particular outcome. Some in
Parliament have insisted that membership of the single market must be maintained
at all costs – and a minority of MPs may seek to do this, despite how badly this
might be perceived by much of the electorate.
However, this is still
going to be a negotiation with the rest of the EU and Parliament cannot
determine the interests or negotiating positions of third parties elsewhere in
Europe. Ultimately, therefore, the Government cannot be bound to any particular
negotiating mandate or outcome. Parliament will likely seek, and get, a vote on
the final package negotiated with the EU but this will effectively be a ‘take it
or leave it’ vote. And, as has been argued by all sides in today’s court case,
once Article 50 is triggered, ‘out’ means ‘out’. The dynamic is such that there
would be no going back to the status quo and a vote to reject any new deal with
the EU would mean leaving on WTO terms.
A
General Election is not out of the questionUltimately, if the
legislation required to enact Article 50 is frustrated or became protracted,
Theresa May could be forced to call a General Election. This would certainly
mean missing the end of March 2017 deadline. But it would also mean that any MPs
seen to be blocking the referendum result would find it very hard to keep hold
of their seats and this is why it is likely that an Article 50 Bill would be
passed.
NOTES
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