84
Acknowledged
We also ask the Government to explain if it intends to make sure that the...
Recommendation
We also ask the Government to explain if it intends to make sure that the new agreements with the EU based on dynamic alignment will include a mechanism, for example modelled on the Stormont Brake, that would enable the UK to reject having to implement a new piece of EU legislation that would otherwise be subject to the requirement to align; and what role it envisages for Parliament, and the House of Commons in particular, in the triggering of such a mechanism. (Recommendation, Paragraph 229)
Government Response Summary
The government acknowledges the role of Parliament and states Parliament will have a say in dynamically aligning with new EU laws, but does not commit to a specific mechanism like the Stormont Brake. They state that they are in negotiations on decision-shaping powers and cannot provide running commentary.
Government Response
Acknowledged
Government Response
Acknowledged
HM Government
Acknowledged
The Government recognises there is an important role for Parliament in the legislation process, and secured explicit reference in the Common Understanding to the United Kingdom’s constitutional and parliamentary procedures for future areas of alignment. Where we dynamically align with new EU laws, Parliament will rightly have a say in this. Parliament will be able to respond to the EU treaties being negotiated and to the Bill itself later this year. We are currently in negotiations on UK decision-shaping powers and will not be able to give a running commentary on the progress of those negotiations. It is a matter for Parliament as to how it scrutinises the work of government through Select Committees.
Source
Committee
Foreign Affairs Committee
Addressee Bodies
Foreign and Commonwealth Office
Timeline
Recommendation age
0.2 yrs
Report published
04 Mar 2026