European Communities Act 1972 (Repeal) Bills

The European Communities Act 1972 (Repeal) Bills were a series of private member's bills of the Parliament of the United Kingdom to make provision for the repeal of the European Communities Act 1972 and end the United Kingdom’s membership of the European Union which at the time of the first bill being presented to Parliament for its first reading on 20 June 2012 by the then prominent Eurosceptic Conservative MP for Clacton Douglas Carswell was approaching his 40th anniversary of being on the statute book. On 26 October 2012 the first bill received its second reading with a half hour debate in the Commons however at the time it did not carry the wider support of the Conservative Party and failed to progress and further before the then current session of Parliament ended. The first bill is also notable for being the first ever private members bill ever to be crowd funded.[1][2]

European Communities Act 1972 (Repeal) Bill 2012-13
Parliament of the United Kingdom
CitationBill 27
Considered byParliament of the United Kingdom
Legislative history
Introduced byDouglas Carswell
First reading20 June 2012
Second reading26 October 2012
Related legislation
European Communities Act 1972
Status: Not passed
European Communities Act 1972 (Repeal) Bill 2013-14
Parliament of the United Kingdom
CitationBill 33
Considered byParliament of the United Kingdom
Legislative history
Introduced byPhilip Hollobone
First reading24 June 2013
Related legislation
European Communities Act 1972
Status: Not passed

Criticism

The first Bill was widely criticised at the time for not including any commitment to the holding of any referendum before the repeal of the European Communities Act 1972 should take place.

Second Bill

The second bill of the same name was presented to Parliament for its first reading by the prominent Conservative Eurosceptic MP for Kettering Philip Hollobone almost exectly a year after the first bill was presented on 20 June 2013, some five months after the Bloomberg speech although unlike the previous bill it never received a second reading and the bill failed to progress any further partly due to the fact at exactly the same time the European Union (Referendum) Bill 2013–14 was going though the House of Commons and had the wider support of the Conseravtive Party including the support of the then Prime Minister David Cameron. [3]

gollark: Yes, so extremely bad, see.
gollark: Well, obviously social credit systems extremely bad?
gollark: I mean, there's no evidence of rainbow formation through this "peace and love" thing, but you can easily make rainbow-type patterns with a regular prism, or even just some plastic rulers.
gollark: I think the specialized optics would work better.
gollark: What's a "peace and love"? How do you recreate that in the lab?

See also

References

  1. "European Communities Act 1972 (Repeal) Bill 2012-13". www.parliament.uk. UK Parliament. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  2. "MPs debate case for UK pulling out of European Union". www.bbc.co.uk. BBC News. 26 October 2012. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  3. "European Communities Act 1972 (Repeal) Bill 2013-14". www.parliament.uk. UK Parliament. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
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