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European Communities Act 1972 (UK)

The European Communities Act 1972 (c 68), also known as the ECA 1972, was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which made legal provision for the accession of the United Kingdom to the three European Communities – the European Economic Community (EEC, the 'Common Market'), European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom), and the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC, which became defunct in 2002); the EEC and ECSC subsequently became the European Union. The Act also incorporated Community Law (later European Union Law) into the domestic law of the United Kingdom and its acquis communautaire, its treaties, regulations and directives, together with judgments of the European Court of Justice, and the Community Customs Union, the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and the Common Fisheries Policy (FCP).

European Communities Act 1972
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act to make provision in connection with the enlargement of the European Communities to include the United Kingdom, together with (for certain purposes) the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and Gibraltar.
Citation1972 c. 68
Introduced byGeoffrey Rippon, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (Commons)
Quintin Hogg, Baron Hailsham of St Marylebone, Lord Chancellor (Lords)
Territorial extent 
Dates
Royal assent17 October 1972
Commencement
  • 17 October 1972
    (partly in force)
  • 1 January 1973
    (wholly in force)
Repealed31 January 2020 (although the effect of the Act was saved by Section 1A of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 until 31 December 2020)
Other legislation
Amended by
Repealed byEuropean Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018
Relates to
Status: Repealed
Text of statute as originally enacted
Revised text of statute as amended

The Treaty of Accession was signed by the then Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath and the then President of the European Commission Franco Maria Malfatti in Brussels on 22 January 1972;[citation needed] the UK's accession into the Communities as a member state was subsequently ratified via the Act to have full legal force from 1 January 1973.

By the Act, Community Law (subsequently European Union Law) became binding on all legislation passed by the UK Parliament (and also upon the UK's devolved administrations—the Northern Ireland Assembly, Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Parliament (Senedd Cymru) although none of these institutions existed at the time of the passing of the Act). It was the most significant constitutional statute to be passed by the Heath government of 1970–1974, and one of the most significant UK constitutional statutes to ever be passed by the UK Parliament.

The Act was at the time of its repeal significantly amended from its original form, incorporating the changes wrought by the Single European Act, the Maastricht Treaty, the Amsterdam Treaty, the Nice Treaty, and the Lisbon Treaty.

On 13 July 2017, the then Brexit Secretary, David Davis, introduced what became the European Union (Withdrawal) Act to Parliament, which made provision for repealing the 1972 Act on "exit day", which was when enacted defined as 29 March 2019 at 11 p.m.(London time, GMT), but later postponed by EU decision first to either 22 May 2019 or 12 April 2019, later to 31 October 2019, and then again to 31 January 2020.

The Act was repealed on 31 January 2020 by the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018, although its effect was 'saved' under the provisions of the European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020. This provision was in effect from 31 January 2020 (when the United Kingdom formally left the European Union) until the end of the Brexit implementation period on 31 December 2020, when the "saving" provisions were automatically repealed.

The repeal of these last remaining provisions ended the automatic incorporation into UK law of all future EU laws (with all previous EU laws being retained and transferred into UK law under the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018), and most future judgments of the ECJ as well as the regulations of the European Union Customs Union, the European Single Market, the Common Agricultural Policy and the Common Fisheries Policy, after 48 years on the statute book (with the exception to Northern Ireland under the terms of the Northern Ireland protocol), bringing to an end decades of political debate and discussions about the constitutional significance of the Act and its effect on the principle of Parliamentary sovereignty.

Origin and background Edit

When the European Communities (EC) came into being in 1958, the UK chose to remain aloof and instead join the alternative bloc, EFTA. Almost immediately the British government regretted its decision, and in 1961, along with Denmark, Ireland and Norway, the UK applied to join the three Communities. However, President Charles de Gaulle saw British membership as a Trojan horse for US influence, and vetoed it; all four applications were suspended. The four countries resubmitted their applications in 1967, and the French veto was lifted upon Georges Pompidou succeeding de Gaulle in 1969.[a] In 1970, accession negotiations took place between the UK Government, led by Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath, the European Communities and various European leaders. Despite disagreements over the CAP and the UK's relationship with the Commonwealth, terms were agreed. In October 1971, after a lengthy six day Commons debate on a white paper motion on the principle of accession, MPs voted 356–244 in favour of joining the EC.[1]

For the Treaty to take effect upon entry into the Communities on 1 January 1973, and for the UK to embrace the EEC Institutions and Community law, an Act of Parliament was required. Only three days after the signing of the Treaty, a European Communities Bill of just 12 clauses,[b] was presented to the House of Commons by Geoffrey Rippon. The European Communities Act came into being, and Edward Heath signed the Treaty of Accession in Brussels on 22 January 1972. Denmark and Ireland also joined the Communities on the same day, 1 January 1973, as the UK; the Norwegian people had rejected membership in a referendum in 1972.

First Reading (House of Commons) Edit

The European Communities Bill was introduced the House of Commons for its first reading by Geoffrey Rippon, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster on 26 January 1972.

Second Reading (House of Commons) Edit

On 17 February 1972, the House of Commons voted narrowly by 309–301 in favour of the Bill at its second reading, after three days of intense debate. Just before the vote the Prime Minister Edward Heath argued his case in the debate with the following words.

The right hon. Gentleman was allowed to deliver a long speech this afternoon as he wished, and I am not going to be interrupted by him now. I believe that our friends would find it incomprehensible if we were to tear up the agreement—the very agreement we have struggled for more than a decade to achieve. For years to come they would understandably ask whether any trust could be placed in Britain's rôle in any future international agreements. Our influence in world monetary and trade discussions would be destroyed. These questions would be settled by the United States, the European Community and Japan. The Community would not be broken up if we were to defect. It would suffer a bitter shock but it would survive and go on. But Britain would not benefit from the progress it was making.

I have dealt with many of the major issues raised in the debate. I will deal now in particular with one matter. As the House knows, I have always believed that our prosperity and our influence in the world would benefit from membership. I believed until recently that we could carry on fairly well outside, but I believe now that with developments in world affairs, and the speed at which they are moving, it will become more and more difficult for Britain alone. Faced with this prospect of change, I do not believe that any Prime Minister could come to this House and say, "We have secured the chance to join the European Community; we have signed the Treaty of Accession; we have the opportunity of full membership; but I now advise this House to throw them away." I do not believe that any Prime Minister could say that, and it follows from what I have said that this Bill is not a luxury which we can dispense with if need be.

It has been a central policy of three successive Governments, irrespective of party, and of all three main parties in this House that Britain should join the European Communities if suitable arrangements could be negotiated. By a large majority this House decided in principle last October that Britain should join the Community on the basis of the arrangements negotiated by my right hon. and learned Friend the Chancellor of the Duchy. Any Government which thereafter failed to give legislative effect to that clear decision of this House would be abdicating its responsibilities.

I must tell the House that my colleagues and I are of one mind that the Government cannot abdicate their responsibilities in this matter. Therefore, if this House will not agree to the Second Reading of the Bill tonight and so refuses to give legislative effect to its own decision of principle, taken by a vast majority less than four months ago, my colleagues and I are unanimous that in these circumstances this Parliament cannot sensibly continue. I urge hon. Members to implement the clear decision of principle taken on 28th October last and to cast their votes for the Second Reading of this Bill.

The Bill then passed on to Committee Stage before its third reading.

Third Reading (House of Commons) Edit

During this discussion in the House of Commons, MPs pointed out that the Government had structured the European Communities Bill so that Parliament could debate the technical issues about how the treaty enactment would occur (how the UK would join the European Communities) but could not debate the treaty of accession itself and decried this sacrifice of Parliament's sovereignty to the Government's desire to join the European project.[2]

On 13 July 1972, the House of Commons voted 301–284 in favour of the Bill in its third and final reading before passing on to the House of Lords. Before the vote took place, Geoffrey Rippon (who had drafted the Bill) argued in the House of Commons immediately before the vote:

My right hon. and learned Friend the Lord Advocate dealt with that matter in Committee. It is a typical antediluvian intervention from an opponent of the Bill.

The building of a united Europe has been an objective of British foreign policy pursued by successive Governments for generations, and it stems, as the House should recognise, from a recognition that even at the height of our power and influence in the 19th century we could not afford to follow a self-isolating policy. It is usually Mr. Gladstone whom I wish to quote but on this occasion Lord Salisbury might be more appropriate. He said: We belong to a great community of nations and we have no right to shrink from the duties which the interests of the Community impose upon us…We are part of the community of Europe and we must do our duty as such. Lord Salisbury said that at Caernarvon on 11th April, 1888, and Mr. Gladstone said the same.

I believe that we shall walk tall into Europe on 1st January 1973. We shall take our rightful place in the counsels of Europe. We shall compete and we shall contribute.

The Bill then passed to the House of Lords.

Royal assent, Ratification, and Taking Effect Edit

The Act received Royal Assent on 17 October,[3] and the UK's instrument of ratification of the Treaty of Accession was deposited the next day with the Italian government (the traditional European Communities treaty records holder) as required by the Treaty. Since the Treaty specified its effective date as 1 January 1973 (in Article 2) and the Act specified only "entry date" for its actions, the Act and the Treaty took effect 1 January 1973, when the United Kingdom officially became a member state of the European Communities (subsequently the European Union) along with Denmark and the Republic of Ireland.

The Act Edit

 
The Act was the most significant constitutional piece of legislation to be passed by the Heath government of 1970–1974[citation needed]
 
Geoffrey Rippon was responsible for drafting the 1972 legislation that took the UK into the then European Communities (which would later become the European Union)

The European Communities Act was the instrument whereby the UK Parliament effected the changes required by the Treaty of Accession by which the UK joined the European Union (then known as the European Communities). The Act as passed in its original form was, given its constitutional significance, surprisingly short and contained just twelve clauses.[4]

Community Law (EU Law) Edit

The Act made the historic legal provision by incorporating and binding Community Law (subsequently European Union Law) and rulings from the European Court of Justice into the domestic law of the United Kingdom along with its acquis communautaire and its regulations and directives. In effect this legislation made Community Law (EU Law) another form of UK Law. The provisions for this was laid out in Section 2 which read:

2. General implementation of Treaties

(1) All such rights, powers, liabilities, obligations and restrictions from time to time created or arising by or under the Treaties, and all such remedies and procedures from time to time provided for by or under the Treaties, as in accordance with the Treaties are without further enactment to be given legal effect or used in the United Kingdom shall be recognised and available in law, and be enforced, allowed and followed accordingly ; and the expression " enforceable Community right" and similar expressions shall be read as referring to one to which this subsection applies.

(2) Subject to Schedule 2 to this Act, at any time after its passing Her Majesty may by Order in Council, and any designated Minister or department may by regulations, make provision—

(a) for the purpose of implementing any Community obligation of the United Kingdom, or enabling any such obligation to be implemented, or of enabling any rights enjoyed or to be enjoyed by the United Kingdom under or by virtue of the Treaties to be exercised ; or
(b) for the purpose of dealing with matters arising out of or related to any such obligation or rights or the coming into force, or the operation from time to time, of subsection (1) above ;

and in the exercise of any statutory power or duty, including any power to give directions or to legislate by means of orders, rules, regulations or other subordinate instrument, the person entrusted with the power or duty may have regard to the objects of the Communities and to any such obligation or rights as aforesaid.

In this subsection " designated Minister or department" means such Minister of the Crown or government department as may from time to time be designated by Order in Council in relation to any matter or for any purpose, but subject to such restrictions or conditions (if any) as may be specified by the Order in Council.

It enabled, under section 2(2), UK government ministers to make regulations to transpose EU Directives (then Community law) and rulings of the European Court of Justice into UK law. The Treaty itself says the member states will conform themselves to the European Communities existing and future decisions. The Act and the Treaty of Accession have been interpreted by UK courts as granting EU law primacy over domestic UK legislation.[5]

European Economic Community (EEC) Edit

The Act legislated for the United Kingdom's accession to the European Economic Community (EEC), which was at the time the main international organisation of the three Communities (more commonly known at the time as the Common Market) and incorporated its rules and regulations into the domestic law of the United Kingdom.

European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) Edit

The Act legislated for the United Kingdom's accession to the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) and incorporated its rules and regulations into the domestic law of the United Kingdom.

European Atomic Energy Community (EAEC or Euratom) Edit

The Act legislated for the United Kingdom's accession to the European Atomic Energy Community (EAEC or Euratom) and incorporated its rules and regulations into the domestic law of the United Kingdom.

The European Treaties Edit

The Act incorporated the following treaties into the domestic law of the United Kingdom.

The following treaties were added to the act though subsequent amendments.

Common Agricultural Policy Edit

The Act legislated for the full participation of the United Kingdom in the Common Agricultural Policy and fully incorporated the policy into UK domestic law. It established the Intervention Board for Agricultural Produce. It repealed previous pieces of UK domestic legislation to allow for this.

Common Fisheries Policy Edit

The Act legislated for the full participation of the United Kingdom in the Common Fisheries Policy and fully incorporates the policy into UK domestic law.

Customs Union Edit

The Act legislated for the incorporation and full participation of the United Kingdom within the European Union Customs Union (then the Community Customs Union) into domestic law, as well as the application of the European common external tariff to all goods which come into the UK from outside the European Communities. The Act repealed large sections of previous UK domestic legislation to allow for this.

Effect and primacy of EC/EU law Edit

The primacy and direct effect of EU law has no formal basis in the founding treaties of the union, but was developed by the European Court of Justice (ECJ), long before UK accession, on the grounds that the purpose of the treaties would be thwarted if EU law were subordinate to national law. The view of the ECJ is that any norm of EU law takes precedence over national law, including national constitutions. Most national courts, including the United Kingdom's, do not accept this monist perspective.[6] The primacy of EU law in the United Kingdom during the time of its membership was derived from the European Communities Act in Section 2 (4) which read as follows:

(4) The provision that may be made under subsection (2) above includes, subject to Schedule 2 to this Act, any such provision (of any such extent) as might be made by Act of Parliament, and any enactment passed or to be passed, other than one contained in this Part of this Act, shall be construed and have effect subject to the foregoing provisions of this section; but, except as may be provided by any Act passed after this Act, Schedule 2 shall have effect in connection with the powers conferred by this and the following sections of this Act to make Orders in Council and regulations.

The British constitution is based on Parliamentary sovereignty and has a dualist view of international law: international treaties do not become part of UK domestic law unless they are incorporated into UK law by an Act of Parliament.[7] This means that if the Act were repealed, any EU law (unless it has been transposed into British legislation) would, in practice, become unenforceable in the United Kingdom and Gibraltar, and the powers delegated by the Act to the EU institutions would return to the Parliament of the United Kingdom.[8] This was attempted to made clear to be the law in the United Kingdom by the Conservative–Liberal Democrat Coalition with the inclusion of the "sovereignty clause" in the EU Act 2011 which was passed by the UK Parliament when the UK was still an EU member state.

Factortame Edit

In the House of Lords Factortame case, Lord Bridge confirmed that section 2(4) of the ECA effectively automatically inserts a virtual (implied) clause into all UK statutes, that they are to be automatically disapplied wherever they come into conflict with European law. This is seen by some[who?] as a departure from the English constitutional doctrine of Westminster parliamentary sovereignty as it was and had been traditionally understood.[9]

Repeal Edit

The United Kingdom voted for withdrawal from the European Union in the referendum held on 23 June 2016, and afterwards there was speculation that the act would be either repealed or amended.[10] In October 2016, Prime Minister Theresa May promised a "Great Repeal Bill" which would repeal the 1972 Act and import its regulations into UK law, with effect from the date of British withdrawal; the regulations could then be amended or repealed on a case-by-case basis.[11]

The European Union (Withdrawal) Bill was introduced in the House of Commons on 13 July 2017. It was passed by Parliament on 20 June 2018, and received royal assent on 26 June 2018.[12] The European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 provides for the repeal of the European Communities Act 1972 at the time the United Kingdom exits the EU, on 29 March 2019 at 11:00 pm.[13] However, in a July 2018 white paper, the government announced its intention to amend the Withdrawal Act to provide for the continued effect of the ECA until the end of the "transition period" (31 December 2020, as of July 2018), therefore allowing EU law to continue to apply in that period.[14] This was achieved when the European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020 was passed in January 2020 which "saved" the effect of the ECA until the end of the implementation period which was scheduled for 31 December 2020 before it was automatically repealed.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ De Gaulle died in 1970.
  2. ^ The 12-clause Bill was criticised by some in the opposition, who had demanded a one-thousand-clause Bill that would be much harder to amend.[citation needed]

References Edit

  1. ^ "EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES (Hansard, 28 October 1971)". api.parliament.uk. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  2. ^ "Orders of the Day — European Communities Bill". TheyWorkForYou. mySociety Limited (a project of UK Citizens Online Democracy). Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  3. ^ "European Communities Act 1972". Living Heritage – Parliament and Europe. UK Parliament. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  4. ^ "European Communities Act 1972". The National Archives. Office of Public Sector Information (OPSI). Archived from the original on 5 August 2008. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  5. ^ "The tension between the supremacy of EU law and Parliament's continuing sovereignty". Law Wales. Law Wales (a collaboration between the Welsh Government and Westlaw UK). Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  6. ^ Craig, Paul; De Burca, Grainne (2015). EU Law: Text, Cases and Materials (6th ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 266. ISBN 978-0-19-871492-7.
  7. ^ Craig, Paul; De Burca, Grainne (2015). EU Law: Text, Cases and Materials (6th ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 365. ISBN 978-0-19-871492-7.
  8. ^ Akehurst, Michael; Malanczuk, Peter (1997). Akehurst's Modern Introduction to International Law. London: Routledge. pp. 65–66. ISBN 978-0-415-11120-1. repeal European Communities Act 1972 international law dualist.
  9. ^ Elliott, M. (2004). "United Kingdom: Parliamentary sovereignty under pressure". International Journal of Constitutional Law. 2 (3): 545–627. doi:10.1093/icon/2.3.545.
  10. ^ Allen Green, David (11 July 2016). "Is an Act of Parliament required for Brexit?". Financial Times. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  11. ^ Mason, Rowena (2 October 2016). "Theresa May's 'great repeal bill': what's going to happen and when?". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  12. ^ "Bill stages — European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 — UK Parliament". parliament.uk. Parliament of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 1 July 2018.
  13. ^ Department for Exiting the European Union (26 June 2018). "Explanatory Notes" (PDF). European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018. p. 9. Retrieved 1 July 2018. The European Union (Withdrawal) Act repeals the ECA on the day the UK leaves the EU (defined in section 20 as 11.00pm on 29 March 2019).
  14. ^ Department for Exiting the European Union (24 July 2018). Legislating for the Withdrawal Agreement between the United Kingdom and the European Union (Report). p. 21. Retrieved 31 July 2018. On exit day (29 March 2019) the EU (Withdrawal) Act 2018 will repeal the ECA. It will be necessary, however, to ensure that EU law continues to apply in the UK during the implementation period. This will be achieved by way of transitional provision, in which the Bill will amend the EU (Withdrawal) Act 2018 so that the effect of the ECA is saved for the time-limited implementation period...The Bill will make provision to end this saving of the effect of the ECA on 31 December 2020.

External links Edit

  • Image of the Act on the UK Parliament website

european, communities, 1972, european, communities, 1972, also, known, 1972, parliament, united, kingdom, which, made, legal, provision, accession, united, kingdom, three, european, communities, european, economic, community, common, market, european, atomic, . The European Communities Act 1972 c 68 also known as the ECA 1972 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which made legal provision for the accession of the United Kingdom to the three European Communities the European Economic Community EEC the Common Market European Atomic Energy Community Euratom and the European Coal and Steel Community ECSC which became defunct in 2002 the EEC and ECSC subsequently became the European Union The Act also incorporated Community Law later European Union Law into the domestic law of the United Kingdom and its acquis communautaire its treaties regulations and directives together with judgments of the European Court of Justice and the Community Customs Union the Common Agricultural Policy CAP and the Common Fisheries Policy FCP European Communities Act 1972Act of ParliamentParliament of the United KingdomLong titleAn Act to make provision in connection with the enlargement of the European Communities to include the United Kingdom together with for certain purposes the Channel Islands the Isle of Man and Gibraltar Citation1972 c 68Introduced byGeoffrey Rippon Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Commons Quintin Hogg Baron Hailsham of St Marylebone Lord Chancellor Lords Territorial extent United Kingdom England and Wales Scotland Northern Ireland Isle of Man Bailiwick of Jersey Bailiwick of Guernsey Gibraltar by implication of the wording of long title and Sections 2 6 and 4 4 DatesRoyal assent17 October 1972Commencement17 October 1972 partly in force 1 January 1973 wholly in force Repealed31 January 2020 although the effect of the Act was saved by Section 1A of the European Union Withdrawal Act 2018 until 31 December 2020 Other legislationAmended byEuropean Communities Greek Accession Act 1979 European Communities Spanish and Portuguese Accession Act 1985 European Communities Amendment Act 1986 European Economic Area Act 1993 European Communities Amendment Act 1993 European Union Accessions Act 1994 European Communities Amendment Act 1998 European Communities Amendment Act 2002 European Union Accessions Act 2003 European Union Accessions Act 2006 European Union Amendment Act 2008 European Union Act 2011 European Union Croatian Accession and Irish Protocol Act 2013Repealed byEuropean Union Withdrawal Act 2018Relates toReferendum Act 1975 European Assembly Elections Act 1978 European Parliamentary Elections Act 1993 European Parliamentary Elections Act 1999 European Parliamentary Elections Act 2002 European Union Referendum Act 2015 European Union Notification of Withdrawal Act 2017 European Union Withdrawal Act 2019 European Union Withdrawal No 2 Act 2019 European Union Withdrawal Agreement Act 2020Status RepealedText of statute as originally enactedRevised text of statute as amended The Treaty of Accession was signed by the then Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath and the then President of the European Commission Franco Maria Malfatti in Brussels on 22 January 1972 citation needed the UK s accession into the Communities as a member state was subsequently ratified via the Act to have full legal force from 1 January 1973 By the Act Community Law subsequently European Union Law became binding on all legislation passed by the UK Parliament and also upon the UK s devolved administrations the Northern Ireland Assembly Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Parliament Senedd Cymru although none of these institutions existed at the time of the passing of the Act It was the most significant constitutional statute to be passed by the Heath government of 1970 1974 and one of the most significant UK constitutional statutes to ever be passed by the UK Parliament The Act was at the time of its repeal significantly amended from its original form incorporating the changes wrought by the Single European Act the Maastricht Treaty the Amsterdam Treaty the Nice Treaty and the Lisbon Treaty On 13 July 2017 the then Brexit Secretary David Davis introduced what became the European Union Withdrawal Act to Parliament which made provision for repealing the 1972 Act on exit day which was when enacted defined as 29 March 2019 at 11 p m London time GMT but later postponed by EU decision first to either 22 May 2019 or 12 April 2019 later to 31 October 2019 and then again to 31 January 2020 The Act was repealed on 31 January 2020 by the European Union Withdrawal Act 2018 although its effect was saved under the provisions of the European Union Withdrawal Agreement Act 2020 This provision was in effect from 31 January 2020 when the United Kingdom formally left the European Union until the end of the Brexit implementation period on 31 December 2020 when the saving provisions were automatically repealed The repeal of these last remaining provisions ended the automatic incorporation into UK law of all future EU laws with all previous EU laws being retained and transferred into UK law under the European Union Withdrawal Act 2018 and most future judgments of the ECJ as well as the regulations of the European Union Customs Union the European Single Market the Common Agricultural Policy and the Common Fisheries Policy after 48 years on the statute book with the exception to Northern Ireland under the terms of the Northern Ireland protocol bringing to an end decades of political debate and discussions about the constitutional significance of the Act and its effect on the principle of Parliamentary sovereignty Contents 1 Origin and background 1 1 First Reading House of Commons 1 2 Second Reading House of Commons 1 3 Third Reading House of Commons 1 4 Royal assent Ratification and Taking Effect 2 The Act 2 1 Community Law EU Law 2 2 European Economic Community EEC 2 3 European Coal and Steel Community ECSC 2 4 European Atomic Energy Community EAEC or Euratom 2 5 The European Treaties 2 6 Common Agricultural Policy 2 7 Common Fisheries Policy 2 8 Customs Union 3 Effect and primacy of EC EU law 3 1 Factortame 4 Repeal 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksOrigin and background EditSee also Accession of the United Kingdom to the European Communities When the European Communities EC came into being in 1958 the UK chose to remain aloof and instead join the alternative bloc EFTA Almost immediately the British government regretted its decision and in 1961 along with Denmark Ireland and Norway the UK applied to join the three Communities However President Charles de Gaulle saw British membership as a Trojan horse for US influence and vetoed it all four applications were suspended The four countries resubmitted their applications in 1967 and the French veto was lifted upon Georges Pompidou succeeding de Gaulle in 1969 a In 1970 accession negotiations took place between the UK Government led by Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath the European Communities and various European leaders Despite disagreements over the CAP and the UK s relationship with the Commonwealth terms were agreed In October 1971 after a lengthy six day Commons debate on a white paper motion on the principle of accession MPs voted 356 244 in favour of joining the EC 1 For the Treaty to take effect upon entry into the Communities on 1 January 1973 and for the UK to embrace the EEC Institutions and Community law an Act of Parliament was required Only three days after the signing of the Treaty a European Communities Bill of just 12 clauses b was presented to the House of Commons by Geoffrey Rippon The European Communities Act came into being and Edward Heath signed the Treaty of Accession in Brussels on 22 January 1972 Denmark and Ireland also joined the Communities on the same day 1 January 1973 as the UK the Norwegian people had rejected membership in a referendum in 1972 First Reading House of Commons Edit The European Communities Bill was introduced the House of Commons for its first reading by Geoffrey Rippon Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster on 26 January 1972 Second Reading House of Commons Edit On 17 February 1972 the House of Commons voted narrowly by 309 301 in favour of the Bill at its second reading after three days of intense debate Just before the vote the Prime Minister Edward Heath argued his case in the debate with the following words The right hon Gentleman was allowed to deliver a long speech this afternoon as he wished and I am not going to be interrupted by him now I believe that our friends would find it incomprehensible if we were to tear up the agreement the very agreement we have struggled for more than a decade to achieve For years to come they would understandably ask whether any trust could be placed in Britain s role in any future international agreements Our influence in world monetary and trade discussions would be destroyed These questions would be settled by the United States the European Community and Japan The Community would not be broken up if we were to defect It would suffer a bitter shock but it would survive and go on But Britain would not benefit from the progress it was making I have dealt with many of the major issues raised in the debate I will deal now in particular with one matter As the House knows I have always believed that our prosperity and our influence in the world would benefit from membership I believed until recently that we could carry on fairly well outside but I believe now that with developments in world affairs and the speed at which they are moving it will become more and more difficult for Britain alone Faced with this prospect of change I do not believe that any Prime Minister could come to this House and say We have secured the chance to join the European Community we have signed the Treaty of Accession we have the opportunity of full membership but I now advise this House to throw them away I do not believe that any Prime Minister could say that and it follows from what I have said that this Bill is not a luxury which we can dispense with if need be It has been a central policy of three successive Governments irrespective of party and of all three main parties in this House that Britain should join the European Communities if suitable arrangements could be negotiated By a large majority this House decided in principle last October that Britain should join the Community on the basis of the arrangements negotiated by my right hon and learned Friend the Chancellor of the Duchy Any Government which thereafter failed to give legislative effect to that clear decision of this House would be abdicating its responsibilities I must tell the House that my colleagues and I are of one mind that the Government cannot abdicate their responsibilities in this matter Therefore if this House will not agree to the Second Reading of the Bill tonight and so refuses to give legislative effect to its own decision of principle taken by a vast majority less than four months ago my colleagues and I are unanimous that in these circumstances this Parliament cannot sensibly continue I urge hon Members to implement the clear decision of principle taken on 28th October last and to cast their votes for the Second Reading of this Bill The Bill then passed on to Committee Stage before its third reading Third Reading House of Commons Edit During this discussion in the House of Commons MPs pointed out that the Government had structured the European Communities Bill so that Parliament could debate the technical issues about how the treaty enactment would occur how the UK would join the European Communities but could not debate the treaty of accession itself and decried this sacrifice of Parliament s sovereignty to the Government s desire to join the European project 2 On 13 July 1972 the House of Commons voted 301 284 in favour of the Bill in its third and final reading before passing on to the House of Lords Before the vote took place Geoffrey Rippon who had drafted the Bill argued in the House of Commons immediately before the vote My right hon and learned Friend the Lord Advocate dealt with that matter in Committee It is a typical antediluvian intervention from an opponent of the Bill The building of a united Europe has been an objective of British foreign policy pursued by successive Governments for generations and it stems as the House should recognise from a recognition that even at the height of our power and influence in the 19th century we could not afford to follow a self isolating policy It is usually Mr Gladstone whom I wish to quote but on this occasion Lord Salisbury might be more appropriate He said We belong to a great community of nations and we have no right to shrink from the duties which the interests of the Community impose upon us We are part of the community of Europe and we must do our duty as such Lord Salisbury said that at Caernarvon on 11th April 1888 and Mr Gladstone said the same I believe that we shall walk tall into Europe on 1st January 1973 We shall take our rightful place in the counsels of Europe We shall compete and we shall contribute The Bill then passed to the House of Lords Royal assent Ratification and Taking Effect Edit The Act received Royal Assent on 17 October 3 and the UK s instrument of ratification of the Treaty of Accession was deposited the next day with the Italian government the traditional European Communities treaty records holder as required by the Treaty Since the Treaty specified its effective date as 1 January 1973 in Article 2 and the Act specified only entry date for its actions the Act and the Treaty took effect 1 January 1973 when the United Kingdom officially became a member state of the European Communities subsequently the European Union along with Denmark and the Republic of Ireland The Act Edit nbsp The Act was the most significant constitutional piece of legislation to be passed by the Heath government of 1970 1974 citation needed nbsp Geoffrey Rippon was responsible for drafting the 1972 legislation that took the UK into the then European Communities which would later become the European Union The European Communities Act was the instrument whereby the UK Parliament effected the changes required by the Treaty of Accession by which the UK joined the European Union then known as the European Communities The Act as passed in its original form was given its constitutional significance surprisingly short and contained just twelve clauses 4 Community Law EU Law Edit The Act made the historic legal provision by incorporating and binding Community Law subsequently European Union Law and rulings from the European Court of Justice into the domestic law of the United Kingdom along with its acquis communautaire and its regulations and directives In effect this legislation made Community Law EU Law another form of UK Law The provisions for this was laid out in Section 2 which read 2 General implementation of Treaties 1 All such rights powers liabilities obligations and restrictions from time to time created or arising by or under the Treaties and all such remedies and procedures from time to time provided for by or under the Treaties as in accordance with the Treaties are without further enactment to be given legal effect or used in the United Kingdom shall be recognised and available in law and be enforced allowed and followed accordingly and the expression enforceable Community right and similar expressions shall be read as referring to one to which this subsection applies 2 Subject to Schedule 2 to this Act at any time after its passing Her Majesty may by Order in Council and any designated Minister or department may by regulations make provision a for the purpose of implementing any Community obligation of the United Kingdom or enabling any such obligation to be implemented or of enabling any rights enjoyed or to be enjoyed by the United Kingdom under or by virtue of the Treaties to be exercised or b for the purpose of dealing with matters arising out of or related to any such obligation or rights or the coming into force or the operation from time to time of subsection 1 above and in the exercise of any statutory power or duty including any power to give directions or to legislate by means of orders rules regulations or other subordinate instrument the person entrusted with the power or duty may have regard to the objects of the Communities and to any such obligation or rights as aforesaid In this subsection designated Minister or department means such Minister of the Crown or government department as may from time to time be designated by Order in Council in relation to any matter or for any purpose but subject to such restrictions or conditions if any as may be specified by the Order in Council It enabled under section 2 2 UK government ministers to make regulations to transpose EU Directives then Community law and rulings of the European Court of Justice into UK law The Treaty itself says the member states will conform themselves to the European Communities existing and future decisions The Act and the Treaty of Accession have been interpreted by UK courts as granting EU law primacy over domestic UK legislation 5 European Economic Community EEC Edit See also European Economic Community The Act legislated for the United Kingdom s accession to the European Economic Community EEC which was at the time the main international organisation of the three Communities more commonly known at the time as the Common Market and incorporated its rules and regulations into the domestic law of the United Kingdom European Coal and Steel Community ECSC Edit See also European Coal and Steel Community The Act legislated for the United Kingdom s accession to the European Coal and Steel Community ECSC and incorporated its rules and regulations into the domestic law of the United Kingdom European Atomic Energy Community EAEC or Euratom Edit See also European Atomic Energy Community The Act legislated for the United Kingdom s accession to the European Atomic Energy Community EAEC or Euratom and incorporated its rules and regulations into the domestic law of the United Kingdom The European Treaties Edit The Act incorporated the following treaties into the domestic law of the United Kingdom Treaty of Paris 1951 Treaty of Rome Euratom Treaty Merger Treaty Budgetary Treaty of 1970 Treaty of Accession 1972The following treaties were added to the act though subsequent amendments Treaty of Accession 1979 through the European Communities Greek Accession Act 1979 Treaty of Accession 1985 through the European Communities Spanish and Portuguese Accession Act 1985 Single European Act through the European Communities Amendment Act 1986 EEA Agreement through the European Economic Area Act 1993 Maastricht Treaty through the European Communities Amendment Act 1993 Treaty of Accession 1994 through the European Union Accessions Act 1994 Amsterdam Treaty through the European Communities Amendment Act 1998 Treaty of Nice through the European Communities Amendment Act 2002 Treaty of Accession 2003 through the European Union Accessions Act 2003 Treaty of Accession 2005 through the European Union Accessions Act 2006 Treaty of Lisbon through the European Union Amendment Act 2008 Treaty of Accession 2011 through the European Union Croatian Accession and Irish Protocol Act 2013 Common Agricultural Policy Edit See also Common Agricultural Policy The Act legislated for the full participation of the United Kingdom in the Common Agricultural Policy and fully incorporated the policy into UK domestic law It established the Intervention Board for Agricultural Produce It repealed previous pieces of UK domestic legislation to allow for this Common Fisheries Policy Edit See also Common Fisheries Policy The Act legislated for the full participation of the United Kingdom in the Common Fisheries Policy and fully incorporates the policy into UK domestic law Customs Union Edit See also European Union Customs Union The Act legislated for the incorporation and full participation of the United Kingdom within the European Union Customs Union then the Community Customs Union into domestic law as well as the application of the European common external tariff to all goods which come into the UK from outside the European Communities The Act repealed large sections of previous UK domestic legislation to allow for this Effect and primacy of EC EU law EditSee also Primacy of European Union law Costa v ENEL and European Union Act 2011 The primacy and direct effect of EU law has no formal basis in the founding treaties of the union but was developed by the European Court of Justice ECJ long before UK accession on the grounds that the purpose of the treaties would be thwarted if EU law were subordinate to national law The view of the ECJ is that any norm of EU law takes precedence over national law including national constitutions Most national courts including the United Kingdom s do not accept this monist perspective 6 The primacy of EU law in the United Kingdom during the time of its membership was derived from the European Communities Act in Section 2 4 which read as follows 4 The provision that may be made under subsection 2 above includes subject to Schedule 2 to this Act any such provision of any such extent as might be made by Act of Parliament and any enactment passed or to be passed other than one contained in this Part of this Act shall be construed and have effect subject to the foregoing provisions of this section but except as may be provided by any Act passed after this Act Schedule 2 shall have effect in connection with the powers conferred by this and the following sections of this Act to make Orders in Council and regulations The British constitution is based on Parliamentary sovereignty and has a dualist view of international law international treaties do not become part of UK domestic law unless they are incorporated into UK law by an Act of Parliament 7 This means that if the Act were repealed any EU law unless it has been transposed into British legislation would in practice become unenforceable in the United Kingdom and Gibraltar and the powers delegated by the Act to the EU institutions would return to the Parliament of the United Kingdom 8 This was attempted to made clear to be the law in the United Kingdom by the Conservative Liberal Democrat Coalition with the inclusion of the sovereignty clause in the EU Act 2011 which was passed by the UK Parliament when the UK was still an EU member state Factortame Edit See also R Factortame Ltd v Secretary of State for Transport In the House of Lords Factortame case Lord Bridge confirmed that section 2 4 of the ECA effectively automatically inserts a virtual implied clause into all UK statutes that they are to be automatically disapplied wherever they come into conflict with European law This is seen by some who as a departure from the English constitutional doctrine of Westminster parliamentary sovereignty as it was and had been traditionally understood 9 Repeal EditMain articles European Union Withdrawal Act 2018 and European Union Withdrawal Agreement Act 2020 The United Kingdom voted for withdrawal from the European Union in the referendum held on 23 June 2016 and afterwards there was speculation that the act would be either repealed or amended 10 In October 2016 Prime Minister Theresa May promised a Great Repeal Bill which would repeal the 1972 Act and import its regulations into UK law with effect from the date of British withdrawal the regulations could then be amended or repealed on a case by case basis 11 The European Union Withdrawal Bill was introduced in the House of Commons on 13 July 2017 It was passed by Parliament on 20 June 2018 and received royal assent on 26 June 2018 12 The European Union Withdrawal Act 2018 provides for the repeal of the European Communities Act 1972 at the time the United Kingdom exits the EU on 29 March 2019 at 11 00 pm 13 However in a July 2018 white paper the government announced its intention to amend the Withdrawal Act to provide for the continued effect of the ECA until the end of the transition period 31 December 2020 as of July 2018 therefore allowing EU law to continue to apply in that period 14 This was achieved when the European Union Withdrawal Agreement Act 2020 was passed in January 2020 which saved the effect of the ECA until the end of the implementation period which was scheduled for 31 December 2020 before it was automatically repealed See also EditCommonwealth of Nations Treaty of Accession 1972 Immigration Act 1971 European Communities Act 1972 Ireland European Communities Amendment Act 1986 European Communities Amendment Act 1993 European Union Amendment Act 2008 European Communities Act 1972 Repeal Bills 1975 United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum European Union Referendum Act 2015 2015 16 United Kingdom renegotiation of European Union membership 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum R Miller v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union European Union Notification of Withdrawal Act 2017 Acts of Parliament of the United Kingdom relating to the European Communities and the European UnionNotes Edit De Gaulle died in 1970 The 12 clause Bill was criticised by some in the opposition who had demanded a one thousand clause Bill that would be much harder to amend citation needed References Edit EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES Hansard 28 October 1971 api parliament uk Retrieved 3 June 2020 Orders of the Day European Communities Bill TheyWorkForYou mySociety Limited a project of UK Citizens Online Democracy Retrieved 30 March 2019 European Communities Act 1972 Living Heritage Parliament and Europe UK Parliament Retrieved 30 March 2019 European Communities Act 1972 The National Archives Office of Public Sector Information OPSI Archived from the original on 5 August 2008 Retrieved 30 March 2019 The tension between the supremacy of EU law and Parliament s continuing sovereignty Law Wales Law Wales a collaboration between the Welsh Government and Westlaw UK Retrieved 30 March 2019 Craig Paul De Burca Grainne 2015 EU Law Text Cases and Materials 6th ed Oxford University Press p 266 ISBN 978 0 19 871492 7 Craig Paul De Burca Grainne 2015 EU Law Text Cases and Materials 6th ed Oxford University Press p 365 ISBN 978 0 19 871492 7 Akehurst Michael Malanczuk Peter 1997 Akehurst s Modern Introduction to International Law London Routledge pp 65 66 ISBN 978 0 415 11120 1 repeal European Communities Act 1972 international law dualist Elliott M 2004 United Kingdom Parliamentary sovereignty under pressure International Journal of Constitutional Law 2 3 545 627 doi 10 1093 icon 2 3 545 Allen Green David 11 July 2016 Is an Act of Parliament required for Brexit Financial Times Retrieved 11 July 2016 Mason Rowena 2 October 2016 Theresa May s great repeal bill what s going to happen and when The Guardian Retrieved 3 October 2016 Bill stages European Union Withdrawal Act 2018 UK Parliament parliament uk Parliament of the United Kingdom Retrieved 1 July 2018 Department for Exiting the European Union 26 June 2018 Explanatory Notes PDF European Union Withdrawal Act 2018 p 9 Retrieved 1 July 2018 The European Union Withdrawal Act repeals the ECA on the day the UK leaves the EU defined in section 20 as 11 00pm on 29 March 2019 Department for Exiting the European Union 24 July 2018 Legislating for the Withdrawal Agreement between the United Kingdom and the European Union Report p 21 Retrieved 31 July 2018 On exit day 29 March 2019 the EU Withdrawal Act 2018 will repeal the ECA It will be necessary however to ensure that EU law continues to apply in the UK during the implementation period This will be achieved by way of transitional provision in which the Bill will amend the EU Withdrawal Act 2018 so that the effect of the ECA is saved for the time limited implementation period The Bill will make provision to end this saving of the effect of the ECA on 31 December 2020 External links EditImage of the Act on the UK Parliament website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European Communities Act 1972 UK amp oldid 1174636304, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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