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Sovereignty Of Parliament (European Communities) Bill 2008-09

Type of Bill:
Private Members' Bill (Presentation Bill)
Sponsor:
Mr Christopher Chope

Progress of the Bill

Bill started in the House of Commons

  1. House of Commons
    1. 1st reading
    2. 2nd reading
    3. Committee stage
    4. Report stage
    5. 3rd reading
  2. House of Lords
    1. 1st reading
    2. 2nd reading
    3. Committee stage
    4. Report stage
    5. 3rd reading
  3. Consideration of Amendments
  4. Royal Assent

Latest Bill

House Bill Date
Commons Bill as introduced | PDF version, 72KB 13.02.2009

Latest news on the Bill

This Bill was presented to Parliament on 26 January 2009.  This is known as First Reading.

The Bill was dropped by its sponsor and will make no further progress this Session.

Summary of the Bill

This Bill seeks to modify the current constitutional position where EU law takes precedence over UK law. This is an obligation acknowledged by the European Court of Justice in many rulings since the 1960s and enforced in the UK via the European Communities Act 1972.

Key areas

  • The Bill aims to ensure that when Parliament adopts a law which it knows conflicts with its obligations under the European Communities Act and which contains wording to that effect (‘this enactment shall take effect notwithstanding the provisions’ of the European Communities Act), then that law should override the Act’s obligations because it is Parliament’s express intention that it should do so
  • It seeks to restore the traditional doctrine of implied repeal, an application of parliamentary sovereignty which has been modified by ‘constitutional’ laws such as the European Communities Act 1972 and the Human Rights Act 1998, in the manner suggested by a ruling of Lord Denning in the case of Macarthy's Ltd v Smith in 1979.

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Related information

Guide to the passage of a Bill

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