Order Paper for Wed 20 May 2020

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Order Paper for Wed 20 May 2020 Wednesday 20 May 2020 Order Paper No.58: Part 1 SUMMARY AGENDA: CHAMBER 11.30am Prayers Afterwards Oral Questions: Scotland* 12 noon Oral Questions: Prime Minister* Afterwards Urgent Questions, including on: Leader of the House (Conduct of business after the Whitsun Recess)* Afterwards Ministerial Statements, including Business Statement* No debate Presentation of Bills Until any hour Business of the House (20 May)** Up to 30 minutes from Statement: UK’s approach to the Northern Ireland the commencement of Protocol** proceedings on the Business of the House (20 May) †(if the Business of the House (20 May) Motion is agreed Motion)† to) No debate Presentation of Bills Up to two hours and Trade Bill: Second Reading** 15 minutes from the commencement of †(if the Business of the House (20 May) Motion is agreed proceedings on the Business to) of the House (20 May) Motion; suspension; up to three hours and 30 minutes from the commencement of proceedings on that Motion† Followed by Motions without separate debate: Programme** Money** 2 Wednesday 20 May 2020 OP No.58: Part 1 Up to four hours and Motion relating to the membership of a Select 30 minutes from the Committee: Liaison** commencement of proceedings on the Business †(if the Business of the House (20 May) Motion is agreed of the House (20 May) to) Motion† Notes: *Hybrid scrutiny proceedings **Hybrid substantive proceedings Wednesday 20 May 2020 OP No.58: Part 1 CONTENTS 3 CONTENTS PART 1: BUSINESS TODAY 4 Chamber 13 Written Statements 14 Committees Meeting Today 16 Announcements 18 Further Information PART 2: FUTURE BUSINESS 20 A. Calendar of Business 33 B. Remaining Orders and Notices Notes: Item marked [R] indicates that a member has declared a relevant interest. 4 Wednesday 20 May 2020 OP No.58: Part 1 BUSINESS TOday: CHAMBER BUSINESS TODAY: CHAMBER Hybrid scrutiny proceedings will commence after Prayers 11.30am Prayers Followed by QUESTIONS 1. Scotland 2. Prime Minister The call list for Members participating is available on the House of Commons business papers pages. URGENT QUESTIONS AND STATEMENTS 12.30pm Urgent Question: To ask the Leader of the House if he will make a statement on the conduct of business after the Whitsun Recess and if he will bring forward the necessary motions to continue the online participation of Members in the business of the House (Alistair Carmichael) The call list for Members participating is available on the House of Commons business papers pages. Ministerial Statements, including Business Statement The call list for Members participating is available on the House of Commons business papers pages. Hybrid substantive proceedings will commence after a suspension of about 15 minutes following Ministerial Statements PRESENTATION OF BILLS No debate (Standing Order No. 57) European Union Withdrawal (Implementation Period) Sir Edward Davey Bill to require Her Majesty’s Government to seek a two-year extension of the implementation period under Article 132 of the Withdrawal Agreement; to repeal the prohibition on agreeing to such an extension under section 33 of the European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020; and for connected purposes. Wednesday 20 May 2020 OP No.58: Part 1 BUSINESS TOday: CHAMBER 5 BUSINESS OF THE DAY 1. BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE (20 MAY) Until any hour Mr Jacob Rees-Mogg That- (1) The following arrangements shall apply to today’s business: Business Timings Remote division designation Statement: The UK’s 30 minutes from the None approach to the Northern commencement of Ireland Protocol proceedings on the Motion for this Order Corporate Insolvency and No debate (Standing Order None Governance Bill No. 57) Counter-Terrorism and No debate (Standing Order None Sentencing Bill No. 57) Trade Bill: Second Reading Up to two hours and Remote division 15 minutes from the commencement of proceedings on the Motion for this Order; suspension; up to three hours and 30 minutes from the commencement of proceedings on the Motion for this Order Trade Bill: Programme No debate (Standing Order Remote division No. 83A(7)) Trade Bill: Money No debate (Standing Order Remote division No. 52(1)(a)) Liaison (Membership) Up to four hours and Remote division 30 minutes from the commencement of proceedings on the Motion for this Order 6 Wednesday 20 May 2020 OP No.58: Part 1 BUSINESS TOday: CHAMBER (2) At the conclusion of each debate, the Speaker shall put the Question on each of the motions on the Order Paper relating to the business listed in the table for that debate. Notes: The Member in charge has designated this item of business as subject to decision by remote division (Order of 22 April (Remote divisions)(2)). Amendment (a) Valerie Vaz Tommy Sheppard Mr Alistair Carmichael Jonathan Edwards Colum Eastwood Caroline Lucas Stephen Farry Patrick Grady Mr Nicholas Brown As an amendment to the motion (Business of the House (20 May)): Leave out the fourth row of the Table and insert Any motion which the 10 minutes Remote division Speaker allows to be moved without notice and as if it were a motion to be taken at the commencement of public business relating to the conduct of proceedings after the Whitsun adjournment Trade Bill: Second Reading Up to two hours and Remote division 5 minutes from the commencement of proceedings on the Motion for this Order; suspension; up to three hours and 30 minutes from the commencement of proceedings on the Motion for this Order 2. STATEMENT: THE UK’S APPROACH TO THE NORTHERN IRELAND PROTOCOL Up to 30 minutes from the commencement of proceedings on the Business of the House (20 May) Motion (if that Motion is agreed to) The call list for Members participating is available on the House of Commons business papers pages. Wednesday 20 May 2020 OP No.58: Part 1 BUSINESS TOday: CHAMBER 7 3. CORPORATE INSOLVENCY AND GOVERNANCE No debate (Standing Order No. 57) Secretary Alok Sharma Bill to make provision about companies and other entities in financial difficulty; and to make temporary changes to the law relating to the governance and regulation of companies and other entities. 4. COUNTER-TERRORISM AND SENTENCING No debate (Standing Order No. 57) Secretary Robert Buckland Bill to make provision about the sentencing of offenders convicted of terrorism offences, of offences with a terrorist connection or of certain other offences; to make other provision in relation to terrorism; and for connected purposes. 5. TRADE BILL: SECOND READING Up to two hours and 15 minutes from the commencement of proceedings on the Business of the House (20 May) Motion; suspension; up to three hours and 30 minutes from the commencement of proceedings on the Business of the House (20 May) Motion (if that Motion is agreed to). Caroline Lucas Geraint Davies That this House declines to give a Second Reading to the Trade Bill because whilst provisions to establish trade agreements following the UK’s exit from the EU are necessary, the Bill fails to uphold democratic scrutiny, contains no provisions for transparency during trade negotiations or Parliamentary oversight of agreements, gives the Executive further unchecked powers to legislate on trade, fails to improve inadequate scrutiny processes enshrined in the Constitutional Reform and Governance Act, leaves UK parliamentarians with less influence over trade policy than their counterparts in other states, does not provide Members of this House with votes on negotiating mandates or trade agreements, overlooks the significant impact of trade agreements on public policy, does not require comprehensive sustainability impact assessments of trade deals, endangers the UK’s social, labour, environmental and agricultural standards and fails to ensure that imported products adhere to at least equivalent standards, does not preclude the inclusion of Investor-State Dispute Settlements in trade agreements, does not focus trade agreements on the Paris Climate Agreement’s ambition to limit global temperature increase to 1.5 degrees or ensure that they are designed to meet the UK’s climate and biodiversity objectives, does not require trade agreements to deliver the Sustainable Development Goals, and does not recognise that the climate and biodiversity emergencies and the Covid-19 pandemic require a fundamental rewrite of the rules of global economy and the objectives of trade policy. 8 Wednesday 20 May 2020 OP No.58: Part 1 BUSINESS TOday: CHAMBER Keir Starmer Emily Thornberry Lisa Nandy Rachel Reeves Bill Esterson Mr Nicholas Brown Geraint Davies That this House recognises that upon leaving the European Union, the UK will need effective legislation to implement agreements with partner countries corresponding to international trade agreements of the European Union in place before the UK’s exit, to implement procurement obligations arising from the UK becoming a member of the Government Procurement Agreement in its own right, to set out the basis of a Trade Remedies Authority to deliver the new UK trade remedies framework, and to establish the powers for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs to collect and disclose data on goods and services exporters; but declines to give a Second Reading to the Trade Bill because it fails to set out proper procedures for Parliamentary consultation, scrutiny, debate and approval of future international trade agreements, fails to protect the principle of Parliamentary sovereignty in respect of the implementation of international trade agreements previously negotiated by the European Union and in respect of changes to existing government procurement regulations arising from the UK’s or other countries’ accession to the Government Procurement Agreement, fails to establish sufficient scrutiny procedures to replace those that have pertained while the UK has been a member of the European Union, fails to guarantee that the UK’s current high standards and rights will be protected in future trade agreements, and fails to render the Trade Remedies Authority answerable to Parliament or representative of the full range of stakeholders who should be included in its membership.
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