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Brexit: EU starts legal action against UK over Brexit deal | Brexit: EU starts legal action against UK over Brexit deal |
(32 minutes later) | |
The EU has begun legal proceedings against the UK after it refused to ditch plans to override sections of its Brexit divorce deal. | The EU has begun legal proceedings against the UK after it refused to ditch plans to override sections of its Brexit divorce deal. |
An EU deadline for the government to remove sections of the Internal Market Bill expired on Wednesday. | |
The "letter of formal notice" could eventually lead to a court case against the UK at the European Court of Justice, the EU's top court. | The "letter of formal notice" could eventually lead to a court case against the UK at the European Court of Justice, the EU's top court. |
But the EU has not walked away from talks over a post-Brexit trade deal. | |
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the UK would have until the end of November to respond to the EU's concerns over the draft legislation. | European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the UK would have until the end of November to respond to the EU's concerns over the draft legislation. |
UK-EU trade talks are continuing in Brussels this week. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said both sides should "move on" if a deal was not reached by mid-October. | |
In a brief statement, Mrs von der Leyen said the bill was a "full contradiction" of previous UK commitments over how a hard border on the island of Ireland should be avoided. | In a brief statement, Mrs von der Leyen said the bill was a "full contradiction" of previous UK commitments over how a hard border on the island of Ireland should be avoided. |
She added that the bill was by its "very nature a breach of the obligation of good faith" contained in the withdrawal deal that took the UK out of the EU in January. | |
A spokesperson for the UK government said the bill was a necessary "safety net" to protect trade between different parts of the UK. | A spokesperson for the UK government said the bill was a necessary "safety net" to protect trade between different parts of the UK. |
They added the government would respond the EU's letter "in due course". | |
MPs gave their final backing to the bill earlier this week. However, it will have to be approved by the House of Lords before it becomes law. | MPs gave their final backing to the bill earlier this week. However, it will have to be approved by the House of Lords before it becomes law. |
In a bid to head off a potential rebellion from Tory backbenchers, ministers have granted the Commons a say before powers to override the Brexit divorce deal could be used. | In a bid to head off a potential rebellion from Tory backbenchers, ministers have granted the Commons a say before powers to override the Brexit divorce deal could be used. |
The letter sent to the UK is the first stage in the process the Commission uses against countries it believes have broken EU law. | The letter sent to the UK is the first stage in the process the Commission uses against countries it believes have broken EU law. |
It can end with the Commission taking governments to court at the European Court of Justice. | It can end with the Commission taking governments to court at the European Court of Justice. |
The court has powers to force countries to comply with its rulings, including by imposing financial penalties. | |
However, most cases are settled before then - and it can take many years for a case to move through the court. | However, most cases are settled before then - and it can take many years for a case to move through the court. |
What is the Internal Market Bill? | |
The bill sets out rules for the operation of the UK internal market - trade between England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland - after the end of the Brexit transition period in January. | |
It proposes: | |
The bill explicitly states that these powers should apply even if they are incompatible with international law. | |
Ministers say the legislation is needed to prevent "damaging" tariffs on goods travelling from the rest of the UK to Northern Ireland if negotiations with the EU on a free trade agreement fail. |