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22 February 2018
Issue: 7782 / Categories: Legal News
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Brexit Bill to be given ten days of scrutiny by peers

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Peers began ten days of line-by-line scrutiny of the Brexit Bill this week, following a stormy Second Reading last month.

The Committee Stage of the European Union (Withdrawal) Bill will take place every Monday and Wednesday until 26 March. During the ten sessions, Peers are expected to discuss exit day issues including the role of devolved administrations, nuclear safeguards, health care, security and the effect of withdrawing from the single market and customs union.

Given the Bill’s controversial passage thus far, the government can expect plenty more potholes on the road.

A record 187 Lords took part in the Second Reading debate, with notified amendments running to more than 80 pages of text. They include Lord Adonis, who proposed but later withdrew a motion regretting that the Bill did not allow for the opinion of the people to be secured on the terms of any proposed withdrawal agreement.

Prior to the debate, the House of Lords’ Constitution Committee published a highly critical report warning that the current form of the Bill risks undermining legal certainty, gives overly-broad powers to ministers and may have significant consequences for the relationship between the UK government and the devolved administrations. Baroness Taylor, who chairs the committee, described the Bill as ‘constitutionally unacceptable’.

Although the committee welcomed the government’s acceptance of the need for a ‘sifting committee’ in the House of Commons to recommend the right level of scrutiny for statutoryinstruments flowing from withdrawal from the EU, it proposed, that, subject to the view of the House, the new committee should have the power to ‘decide’, not merely to ‘recommend.’ 

Issue: 7782 / Categories: Legal News
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NEWS
Cheating in driving tests is surging—and courts are responding firmly. Writing in NLJ this week, Neil Parpworth of De Montfort Law School charts a rise in impersonation and tech-assisted fraud, with 2,844 attempts recorded in a year
As AI-generated ‘deepfake’ images proliferate, the law may already have the tools to respond. In NLJ this week, Jon Belcher of Excello Law argues that such images amount to personal data processing under UK GDPR
In a striking financial remedies ruling, the High Court cut a wife’s award by 40% for coercive and controlling behaviour. Writing in NLJ this week, Chris Bryden and Nicole Wallace of 4 King’s Bench Walk analyse LP v MP [2025] EWFC 473
A €60.9m award to Kylian Mbappé has refocused attention on football’s controversial ‘ethics bonus’ clauses. Writing in NLJ this week, Dr Estelle Ivanova of Valloni Attorneys at Law examines how such provisions sit within French labour law

The Court of Appeal has slammed the brakes on claimants trying to swap defendants after limitation has expired. In Adcamp LLP v Office Properties and BDB Pitmans v Lee [2026] EWCA Civ 50, it overturned High Court rulings that had allowed substitutions under s 35(6)(b) of the Limitation Act 1980, reports Sarah Crowther of DAC Beachcroft in this week's NLJ

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