A prospective legal challenge has been initiated in a bid to prevent a Stormont vote on continuing post-Brexit trading arrangements for Northern Ireland.
Loyalist activist Jamie Bryson has issued pre-action protocol correspondence to Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn challenging his move to initiate the democratic consent process that is required under the UK and EU’s Windsor Framework deal.
The vote on extending the current system is expected to take place in the Northern Ireland Assembly on December 10th.
Mr Bryson has threatened to take an emergency judicial review if Mr Benn does not respond by December 5th confirming that he is stopping the democratic consent process.
Mr Bryson’s argument is grounded on law changes introduced by the previous UK government earlier this year as part of its Safeguarding the Union deal to restore powersharing at Stormont.
He claims that if the amendments achieved their purpose – namely, to safeguard Northern Ireland’s place within the United Kingdom – then it would be unlawful to renew and extend post-Brexit trading arrangements that have created economic barriers between the region and the rest of the UK.
In 2023, the UK Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the trading arrangements for Northern Ireland are lawful.
The appellants in the case argued that legislation passed at Westminster to give effect to the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement conflicted with the 1800 Acts of Union that formed the United Kingdom, particularly Article 6 of that statute guaranteeing unfettered trade within the UK.
The Supreme Court found that while Article 6 of the Acts of Union has been “modified” by the arrangements, that was done with the express will of a sovereign parliament and so therefore was lawful.
Mr Bryson contends that amendments made to the Withdrawal Agreement earlier this year – as part of the Safeguarding the Union measures proposed by the UK government to convince the DUP to return to powersharing – purport to reassert and reinforce Northern Ireland’s constitutional status in light of the Supreme Court judgment.
“If this legislative provision has meaning, then it must surely act as a barrier to the continued subjugation and suspension of Article 6 of the Acts of Union which the consent vote proposes to bring about,” he said.
Mr Bryson added: “This emergency legal challenge will test the strength of these purported constitutional guarantees. If it transpires the supposed constitutional guarantees secured via the Safeguarding the Union deal are in fact utterly useless, then that surely must raise urgent questions about the sustainability of unionist participation in the NI Executive.”
The framework, and its predecessor the Northern Ireland Protocol, require checks and customs paperwork on goods moving from Great Britain into Northern Ireland.
Under the arrangements, which were designed to ensure no hardening of the Irish land border post-Brexit, Northern Ireland continues to follow many EU trade and customs rules.
This has proved highly controversial, with unionists arguing the system threatens Northern Ireland’s place in the United Kingdom.
Advocates of the arrangements argue they help insulate the region from negative economic consequences of Brexit.
A dispute over the so-called Irish Sea border led to the collapse of the Northern Ireland Assembly in 2022, when the DUP withdrew then first minister Paul Givan from the coalition executive. The impasse lasted two years and ended in January when the Government published its Safeguarding the Union measures.
Under the terms of the framework, a Stormont vote must be held on articles five to 10 of the Windsor Framework, which underpin the EU trade laws in force in Northern Ireland, before they expire.
The vote must take place before December 17th.
Based on the numbers in the Assembly, MLAs are expected to back the continuation of the measures for another four years, even though unionists are set to oppose the move.
DUP leader Gavin Robinson has already made clear his party will be voting against continuing the operation of the Windsor Framework.
Unlike other votes on contentious issues at Stormont, the motion does not require cross-community support to pass.
If it is voted through with a simple majority, the arrangements are extended for four years. In that event, the Government is obliged to hold an independent review of how the framework is working.
If it wins cross-community support – which is a majority of unionists and a majority of nationalists – then it is extended for eight years.
The chances of it securing such cross-community backing are highly unlikely.
In a statement, a UK Government spokesman said: “In accordance with its legal obligations under the Windsor Framework and domestic law, the Government began the process for the democratic consent vote.
“A motion has now been tabled by elected representatives in the NI Assembly, which will decide the outcome.”