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Backbench Tories plot to rein in government’s coronavirus powers in Commons showdown

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks at the weekly cabinet meeting at the Foreign and Commonwealth office on September 15, 2020 in London (AFP via Getty Images)
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks at the weekly cabinet meeting at the Foreign and Commonwealth office on September 15, 2020 in London (AFP via Getty Images)

Backbench Tory MPs are plotting to rein in the government’s ability to implement lockdown rules without parliamentary scrutiny in a Commons showdown, it has been reported.

The government is set to vote to renew the Coronavirus Bill – which gives the state its power to implement lockdown measures – in a house vote in the coming week as part of a six-month renewal built into the legislation.

However, a prominent Conservative backbencher is expected to table an amendment to the bill that will ensure the government can not add additional lockdown rules without the consent of parliament, according to a report in The Sunday Telegraph.

Sir Graham Brady, chair of the influential 1922 committee of backbench Tories, is expected to table the amendment forcing any government expansion of the bill to a vote in the commons.

The measure is likely to find supporters among the Conservatives, with several of the party’s MPs having raised concerns in the Commons over the implementation of lockdown measures without parliamentary oversight.

Sir Graham told the paper: “We now know that the NHS coped will with the challenge of the virus and parliament has been sitting largely since April.

“There is now no justification for minister ruling by emergency powers without reference to normal democratic processes”.

It comes as Boris Johnson looks to deploy new measures to subdue a second outbreak of the virus in the UK, with case numbers continuing to rise after social distancing measures were eased by Westminster.

The PM is understood to be holding meetings across the weekend to discuss how to respond to the virus threat, with curfews on hospitality venues and limits on household mingling reported to be among measures under consideration.