The U.K.'s controversial Internal Market Bill easily cleared its final hurdle in the House of Commons on Tuesday night. Bill will now go to the House of Lords after a tiny rebellion failed to prevent its passage.
It passed by 340 votes to 256, with only a small number of Tory MPs rebelling and not voting for the bill.
The bill seeks to give ministers powers to rewrite sections of the
Withdrawal Agreement signed by the U.K. government and European Union
last year. When the Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis admitted in the Commons
that this would break international law, many Tories were dismayed and
threatened to prevent the bill from passing through parliament.
Downing Street eventually compromised, reducing the prospect of a
large rebellion by accepting an amendment that would give MPs a vote
before the government could use any of the powers in the bill to break
international law.
In the end, not a single Conservative MP actively voted against the
bill at the final stage though 21 abstained, including former Prime
Minister Theresa May who had earlier said she could not support the
legislation. A number of those abstentions were simply on account of
absence rather than indicative of withheld support.
However, the legislation remains a key point of contention between
the European Union and U.K. government as future relationship talks
continue, with European Commission Vice President Maroš Šefčovič confirming Monday the EU again requested "the contentious parts of the draft internal market bill" are withdrawn by the end of September.
U.K. Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove, said after a meeting with
Šefčovič on Monday that the contentious provisions would stay in the
legislation....
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