Abstract
Constitutions come under pressure during emergencies and, as is increasingly clear, during pandemics. Taking the legislative and post-legislative debates in Westminster and the Devolved Legislatures on the Coronavirus Act 2020 (CVA) as its focus, this paper explores the robustness of parliamentary accountability during the pandemic, and finds it lacking. It suggests that this is attributable not to the situation of emergency per se, but to (a) executive decisions that have limited Parliament's capacity to scrutinise; (b) MPs' failure to maximise the opportunities for scrutiny that did exist; and (c) the limited nature of Legislative Consent Motions (LCMs) as a mode of holding the central government to account. While at first glance the CVA appears to confirm the view that in emergencies law empowers the executive and reduces its accountability, rendering legal constraints near-futile, our analysis suggests that this ought to be understood as a product, to a significant extent, of constitutional actors’ mindset vis-à-vis accountability.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1463-1503 |
Number of pages | 41 |
Journal | Modern Law Review |
Volume | 85 |
Issue number | 6 |
Early online date | 11 Jul 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Nov 2022 |
Keywords
- parliamentary accountability
- emergency legislation
- Covid-19
- legislative scrutiny
- constitutional mindset
- Coronavirus Act 2020