SAWT BEIRUT INTERNATIONAL

| 25 April 2024, Thursday |

UK leadership candidate Truss pledges to ditch all EU laws by 2023

The top contender to succeed Boris Johnson as British prime minister, Liz Truss, has pledged that if she is elected leader of the Conservative Party, she will repeal all European Union regulations that are still in effect in Britain by 2023.

To win over the 200,000 Conservative Party members who will cast ballots to select the nation’s new prime minister this summer, Foreign Secretary Truss must defeat former Finance Minister Rishi Sunak.

Britain’s relationship with Europe remains of great concern to the Conservative Party membership, generally characterised as more eurosceptic than the wider population.

Hoping to tap into that, Truss, who campaigned for ‘remain’ in the 2016 referendum but is now seen as the heir to Johnson’s pro-Brexit position, promised to purge all remaining EU laws from the statute books.

To avoid uncertainty and confusion as Britain untangled itself from the EU after 40 years of membership, the government automatically carried over thousands of EU laws and regulations into British law so that they would still apply after Brexit.

“EU regulations hinder our businesses and this has to change,” Truss said in a statement. The statement said she was setting out her credentials as the “Brexit delivery” prime minister.

“In Downing Street, I will seize the chance to diverge from outdated EU law and frameworks and capitalise on the opportunities we have ahead of us.”

The government has already set out its intention to replace or repeal existing EU laws but had not set a timeframe.

Truss’s deadline of 2023 is earlier than a similar pledge made by Sunak, who campaigned for Brexit in 2016 but has been vilified by some corners of the Conservative Party for raising taxes to their highest level in decades.

Sunak said EU law would be scrapped or reformed by the next election, which is expected in 2024. Truss leads Sunak by 62% to 38% among Conservative Party members, according to a YouGov poll on Thursday.

    Source:
  • Reuters