Nothing beats a long weekend.
But in the british parliament house of commons it may have a long wait, before the politicians can once again hold the Friday and the whole weekend free.
with exactly two months left before the Uk’s official withdrawal from the european UNION 29. march, operating Downing Street and british politicians now with an emergency plan, which must include Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, the parliament adopted the necessary legislation to replace a mountain of EU rules in connection with the withdrawal.
It writes The Guardian, who has spoken with sources in the prime minister Theresa Mays staff in Downing Street.
According to the newspaper, there are only 30 working days left before the d. 29. march. A spokesperson for The Guardian confirmed the emergency plan.
– As a measure, we have had indledenede discussions about extending check-in times – but only if it becomes necessary, reads it from the prime minister’s spokesperson.
The main challenge for the uk government is to get the support for britain’s own udtrædelsesaftale with the european UNION, ms Theresa May, to put it mildly difficult to get through parliament, after she two weeks ago suffered a record defeat.
today May have a plan B for the house of commons. But also here expected she to run into problems. And it remains to be seen whether Theresa May at all once to get ratified an agreement in his own parliament, before the critical deadline 29. march.
in Addition, according to The Guardian six other fundamental pieces of legislation, which must be implemented before the end of march, covering trade, immigration, financial matters, agriculture and fisheries, and agreements on the international health coverage.
Finally, there is the 12,000 EU laws, that need to be incorporated into british law, which also includes 600 notices about how the laws are interpreted and implemented.
Of the 600 notices are 343 been submitted to parliament, but only 104 have been adopted according to the Hansard, which is the british counterpart to Folketingstidende.
British politicians usually meet only once a month on Fridays during the year, extending from October to July. The monthly meetings are used for so-called ‘private bill’ that is tabled by members of parliament on their own behalf and not on behalf of the government.