UK Parliament / Open data

Parliamentary scrutiny of trade deals

Commons Debate pack by Matthew Ward and Dominic Webb. It was first published on Tuesday, 4 October 2022. It was last updated on Wednesday, 12 October 2022.

Summary

Free trade agreements (FTAs) cover a wide range of policy areas so it is important that they receive proper parliamentary scrutiny.

Trade agreements are international treaties. The UK Government is responsible for negotiating, signing and ratifying them under its prerogative powers. The Constitutional Reform and Governance Act (CRAG) Act 2010 sets out the statutory framework for treaty scrutiny. There have been calls for this to be strengthened to give Parliament a greater role. The Government has made a number of non-statutory commitments on parliamentary scrutiny of trade agreements.

Scrutiny of the UK’s trade agreement with Australia, the first post-Brexit trade deal, did not go smoothly. There was no debate in the House of Commons within the 21 day period for treaty scrutiny under CRAG. The Commons International Trade Committee published a highly critical report on the scrutiny arrangements for this agreement.

On 19 July, Anthony Mangnall MP, the sponsor of this Westminster Hall debate, was granted an Urgent Question on parliamentary scrutiny of the trade agreement with Australia. Scrutiny issues were also raised during the second reading of Trade (Australia and New Zealand) Bill on 6 September.

About this research briefing

Reference

CDP-2022-0164 
Agriculture Act 2020
Wednesday, 11 November 2020
Public acts
Trade Act 2021
Thursday, 29 April 2021
Public acts
Trade (Australia and New Zealand) Bill 2022-23
Wednesday, 11 May 2022
Bills
House of Commons
Trade Deals: Parliamentary Scrutiny
Wednesday, 12 October 2022
Parliamentary proceedings
House of Commons

Contains statistics

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