Delegated legislation in the pandemic: further limits of a constitutional bargain revealed

Abstract The challenge that delegated legislation poses to parliamentary sovereignty and associated supremacy in the UK is purportedly addressed through what we term the ‘constitutional bargain of delegated law-making’. This has three elements: the proper limitation of delegation by Parliament through well-designed parent legislation; the exercise of self-restraint by the Executive in the use of delegated authority; and the enablement of meaningful scrutiny by Parliament. As a paradigm situation in which delegated law-making might be said to be necessary, the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic is an apposite context in which to assess the robustness of that bargain. Our analysis uses a sample of Westminster-generated pandemic-related secondary instruments as a peephole into the broader dynamics of this constitutional bargain and further reveals its significant frailties; frailties that are exposed, but not created, by the pandemic.


Introduction
Delegated legislation has caused constitutional anxiety for decades.Even while conceding its indispensability to effective governance, 1 particularly in situations requiring rapid or highly technical responses, scholars, parliamentarians, and courts have long accepted that delegated legislation is a deviation from the alleged paradigm mode of law-making in parliamentary democracies: primary legislation. 2In the United Kingdom (UK), the challenge that delegated legislation poses to the cardinal principle of parliamentary sovereignty and associated supremacy has been purportedly answered through what we term the 'constitutional bargain of delegated law-making'.Building on parliamentary committees' long-standing observations, we claim that this has three elements: the proper limitation of delegation by Parliament through well-designed parent legislation; the exercise of self-restraint by the Executive in the use of delegated authority; and the enablement of meaningful scrutiny by Parliament. 3 The Covid-19 pandemic offers a critical context in which to explore how this constitutional bargain reveals its limits when confronted by the stresses of extensive delegated law-making.
Legislation has been an important part of the UK government's response to the Covid-19 pandemic. 4While the Coronavirus Act 2020 (CVA 2020) was the flagship pandemic primary legislation passed specifically in response to coronavirus, introduced at speed and conferring extensive powers on Government, 5 the majority of pandemic law-making has been delegated.One might claim that this is unremarkable: the pandemic required swift and sometimes emergency action, often on highly technical matters, in a rapidly changing social and epidemiological context wherein some flexibility was reasonably required.In other words, the pandemic at least initially seemed to present many of the classically recognised conditions in which delegating law-making might be said to be necessary, 6 and parliamentarians seemed in broad agreement that an urgent legislative response enabling delegation was required and appropriate. 7However, as time passed and the pandemic persisted, so too did the reliance on delegated legislation, leading to widespread concern. 8We note that between March 2020 and May 2022, the Government laid over 580 Covid-19-related statutory instruments before Parliament, 9 and there is persistent concern that the Government's reliance on delegated law-making is part of a wider trend of executive dominance posing a fundamental threat to parliamentary democracy. 10his paper contributes to this growing literature by using a sample of Covid-19 regulations as a context in which to pursue an empirically informed analysis of whether, in the context of Westminster, the constitutional bargain of delegated law-making held up during the first year of the pandemic. 11In doing so, we do not wish overly to exceptionalise the Covid-19 pandemic as a period of especially unusual law-making.We are conscious that pandemic law-making has taken place against the backdrop of extensive delegated law-making related to Brexit, 12 as well as a growing practice of conferring wide-ranging delegated powers in primary legislation.However, we consider that as a paradigm situation in which delegated law-making might be said to be necessary, the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic is an apposite context in which to assess the robustness of that bargain.We are also conscious that concerns about the use of delegated or executive law-making during the pandemic are not unique to the UK. 13 Although our study focuses on the Westminster Parliament, and our analysis is grounded in the longstanding debates about delegation that relate specifically to this context, the broader concernwith parliamentary marginalisationhas wider resonance.
Our analysis uses a sample of the secondary instruments applying to England and introduced by the UK Government as part of the pandemic response as a lens into broader dynamics. 14The sample comprises 81 Covid-related regulations, a list of which is set out in full below in the Appendix.They were chosen on the basis that these were the regulations that were subject to Parliamentary debate over the first year of the pandemic, ie between March 2020 and March 2021.330 other Covid-19 regulations also passed that year were subject to the negative procedure and not debated in Parliament.The total of 415 Covid-related regulations passed that year formed approximately a third of the total 1,206 statutory instruments made during that 12-month period. 15he regulations were identified using the Hansard search engine.We used the search engine to find all debates concerning 'coronavirus regulations' listed between 9 March 2020 and 9 March 2021.This generated 123 results.These results were then filtered down to determine the number of regulations that were subject to substantive debates, as listed in the Appendix.This required us to identify which regulations had been debated, and how many times (as some regulations were subject to more than one debate, having been debated in both Houses of Parliament, or both a House and the Delegated Legislation Committee).Notably, there were challenges in doing this.First, some regulations were referred to in slightly different ways in Hansardie in most cases the House of Lords referred to draft regulations without using the word 'draft' in the debate title, but on examining the debate it was clear that the regulations were in fact draft regulations.Secondly, a challenge arose in identifying whether regulations listed for debate on the same day were debated or not.While some appeared to have been debated and then approved, and others to have been approved without debate, closer reading of the debates on regulations that took place on the relevant day led us to identify what we term bundle and umbrella debates in the Appendix.Bundle debates occurred when a debate listed as being on one set of regulations actually expanded to and covered the contents of other regulations that were voted on later that day.This usually arose where the Minister sponsoring the regulations explicitly 'Proposals for a new system for delegated legislation' (The Hansard Society, 2023) https://hansardsociety.vercel.app/publications/reports/proposals-for-a-new-system-for-delegated-legislation-a-working-paper (last accessed 9 August 2023); O Bowcott 'Ex-lord chief justice: UK parliament must scrutinise Covid rules' The Guardian (London, 28 September  2020)  https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/28/ex-lord-chief-justice-uk-parliament-must-scrutinise-covid-rules(last accessed 7 August 2023).referred to those other regulations in their contributions.Umbrella debates occurred when the debate on one set of regulations covered a topic that was closely related with the title and contents of a set of regulations that was voted later that day.For instance, on 12 October 2020 three sets of regulations on mask-wearing were listed for debate at the Lords but the record seems to suggest that only the first one was debated.Although we found no explicit reference to the other two regulations, the content and context of the debate led us to conclude that it covered all of them.We refer to these as 'umbrella debates' and list the regulations approved following them.Finally, there was one debate listed on prospective (rather than draft) regulations concerning assisted dying.This was nonetheless included in the Appendix.
In carrying out our analysis, we assessed several general features of the 81 regulations.These included whether and when they were in force, whether they were debated by themselves or alongside other regulations, in what part or parts of Parliament they were debated, and what parent Act they were passed under.This revealed that 75 of the 81 regulations we considered were already in force when they were debated and 10 were in draft form (ie not yet in force).These debates ordinarily considered only one regulation, although on certain occasions bundle and umbrella debates were held that concerned multiple regulations at the same time. 16In the main, the debates took place in the House of Lords and the Delegated Legislation Committee. 17On two occasions, there were debates on draft regulations in the House of Commons.This followed a government commitment to 'consult' Parliament on 'significant measures' in advance of their coming into force 'wherever possible'. 18The first of these debates enabled the House of Commons to scrutinise seven draft Covid-19 regulations on 13 October 2020. 19The second debate considered the impact of proposed new coronavirus regulations on the ability of terminally-ill adults to travel abroad for an assisted death. 20Our analysis relied on the record of all these debates in Hansard, totalling the equivalent of approximately 54 hours of parliamentary time.
Almost all the regulations contained in our sample were passed or proposed using powers contained in the Public Health (Control of Disease) Act 1984 (PHA 1984)  21 (65 regulations, one draft regulation) with only a one regulation flowing from the CVA 2020 22 (one draft regulation).That said, our sample does illustrate the wide array of parent Acts, some joint parent Acts, that have been used for Covid-related delegated law-making.The included regulations were also made under the Road Traffic Act 1988 (one regulation), the Vehicle Excise and Registration Act 1994 and the Road Traffic Act 1988 and the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984 (one regulation), the Energy Act 2013 (two regulations), the Higher Education and Research Act 2017 and the Teaching and Higher Education Act 1998 (two regulations), the Planning Act 2008 (one regulation), the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (one regulation), the Apprenticeships, Skills, Children and Learning Act 2009 (one regulation), the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2020 (three regulations), the Business and Planning Act 2020 (one regulation), the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (one regulation).One further set of proposed regulations was debated without the parent Act being identified at the time. 23ur analysis of this sample reveals significant frailties across all three dimensions of the constitutional bargain.After having set out the nature and source of the constitutional bargain in delegated 16 See Table C of the Appendix for a full breakdown.17 56 debates within the Delegated Legislation Committee and 28 within the House of Lords.
18 Hansard HC Deb, vol 682, col 193, 13 October 2020.19   Health Protection (Coronavirus, Local Covid-19 Alert Level) (Medium) (England) Regulations 2020, Health Protection (Coronavirus, Local Covid-19 Alert Level)  law-making in Part 1, we reveal in Part 2 three ways in which this bargain was undermined during the pandemic.The first is that by creating 'skeleton Acts' before and during the pandemicgiving Government wide latitude that was used for pandemic law-making -Parliament failed to appropriately delimit delegated law-making.The second is that the Executive failed to exercise self-restraint in the use of such delegated authority.The third is that Parliament was denied opportunities for meaningful scrutiny of these regulations.
These frailties expose a rupture of the delicate balance between delegation and abrogation that is foreseen as a means of managing the potential constitutionalist deficits of delegation and associated undermining of parliamentary sovereignty.As we outline in the conclusion, that bargain is not irredeemable: serious proposals exist that, if implemented, could shore up the constitutional bargain of delegated law-making and restore constitutional equilibrium.

The constitutional bargain of delegated law-making
As Jeff King has noted, it was the Donoughmore Committee, almost a hundred years ago, that developed a comprehensive understanding of the use of delegated law-making that set boundaries on its constitutionally appropriate use. 24As we will show, these boundaries have been reinforced by subsequent Parliaments. 25This understanding distinguished between 'normal' and 'exceptional' uses of delegated law-making, with the former being characterised by: (i) a clear delineation of powers; (ii) easy access to courts to enforce the vires of delegated legislation; (iii) transparency and easy accessibility of delegated legislation for citizens and public officials; and (iv) no conferral of powers to legislate on matters of principle, to raise taxes, or to amend or repeal primary legislation.For the Donoughmore Committee, exceptional uses of delegated law-makingusing delegated legislation to legislate on matters of principle, creating Henry VIII powers, conferring 'so wide a discretion on a Minister that it is almost impossible to know what limit Parliament did intend to impose', or ousting judicial reviewwere constitutionally suspect. 26undamental to the problématique of delegated legislation was the conferring of delegated lawmaking powers through 'skeleton legislation' that contained 'only the barest general principles' and permitted 'matters which closely affect the rights and property of the subject [to] be left to be worked out in the Departments, with the result that laws are … [not] made by, and get little supervision from, Parliament'. 27or the Donoughmore Committee, skeleton legislation of this kind was indicative of the deeper problems of 'loosely defined powers', 28 'inadequate scrutiny in Parliament', 29 broad powers being used to 'deprive the citizen of the protection of the Courts against action by the Executive which is harsh, or unreasonable', 30 and a lack of transparency and publicity about the extent or existence of such powers.Quite understandably, given its practical utility, the Committee did not consider that such problems 'destroy[ed] the case for delegated legislation' but did argue that they showed the need for some safeguards to be put in place so that Parliament could 'continue to enjoy the advantages of the practice without suffering from its inherent dangers'. 31 (HL 216, HC 31-xxxvii (1985-86)); Delegated Powers Scrutiny Committee 1st Report (Session 1992-93, HL 57), para 1 and Special Report (1995-1996, HL  103, HC 582)

Legal Studies
The problems identified by the Donoughmore Committee have not abated.Indeed, they have become more acute in the ninety years since its report was published.Continuing a trend that has been of concern for decades, 32 a huge amount of delegated legislation continues to be made, 33 Henry VIII powers are increasingly widespread, 34 and delegated law-making is heavily relied on to address complex but constitutionally significant 'events' like Brexit, 35 as well as issues with clear human rights and rule of law implications like deportation and asylum-related procedures, 36 and changes to criminal law. 37There is an argument, then, that the 'exceptional' has become increasingly normalised; that secondary legislation is now routinely being used for purposes and in respect of issues that the Donoughmore Committee recognised as being ill-suited to delegation.At the same time, it is not at all clear that the safeguards the Donoughmore Committee called for operate effectively to maintain constitutional integrity in the light of this extensive use of delegated law-making. 38e argue that these safeguards can be found in a three-part constitutional bargain on delegated law-making between the Executive and Parliament, comprised of proper limitation of delegation by Parliament, self-restraint on the part of the Executive, and meaningful scrutiny by Parliament.This way of conceptualising how to manage the long-standing tension between practicality and principle when it comes to delegated law-making clearly involves trade-offs.Robust limitation of delegation by Parliament may slow down policy responses by requiring more primary legislation to be passed before regulations can be produced.Meaningful parliamentary scrutiny may mean that regulations cannot immediately come into force.Executive self-restraint may limit policy, flexibility, dynamism, innovation or responsiveness.On the other hand, allowing delegation per se means that Parliament limits its capacity to influence and shape government action, making itself vulnerable to the extent of the Executive's commitment to self-restraint and accountability to Parliament.The constitutional bargain seeks not to resolve but to manage these tensions; to provide a framework to safeguard constitutional principle while enabling everyday governance.A Sinclair and J Tomlinson 'Brexit, primary legislation, and statutory instruments: everything in its right place?' (UK Constitutional Law Association, 25 March 2019) https://ukconstitutionallaw.org/2019/03/25/alexandra-sinclair-and-joetomlinson-brexit-primary-legislation-and-statutory-instruments-everything-in-its-right-place/(last accessed 7 August 2023).Although overly broad parent legislation clearly runs the risk of giving excessive legislative power to the Executive and going beyond what is needed for technical or 'merely' regulatory purposes, there is no clear constitutional line indicating what is and what is not suitable for delegation.Instead, and in keeping with the principles of the UK constitution, parent Acts are treatedas all other acts areas exercises in parliamentary sovereignty; expressions by Parliament of how much legislative power it wishes the Executive to enjoy.As in all situations of delegation, this produces a paradox: parent Acts at once express Parliament's sovereignty and undermine its role as the principal law-making body. 39Seeking to manage this apparent paradox, parliamentary and special committees have developed the concept of 'skeleton Bills'.Such Bills were first defined by the Donoughmore Committee as ones in which 'only the barest general principles' are outlined, which permit 'matters which closely affect the rights and property of the subject [to] be left to be worked out in the Departments, with … little supervision from, Parliament', 40 or which contain such significant delegated powers that the 'real operation [of the Act] would be entirely by the regulations made under it'. 41They have more recently been described by parliamentarians as broad delegated powers 'sought in lieu of policy detail'. 42s emphasised by the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee (DPRRC), primary legislation can be characterised as 'skeleton' either in toto or in respect of specific provisions. 43In line with parliamentary committees and scholars, we take the view that skeleton provisions should be avoided wherever possible, and therefore that the scope of the powers should contain at least the gist of the policy so that Parliament is able to scrutinise its merits.In those exceptional circumstances where the government can put a convincing case for wide-ranging delegation, there is room for an alternativeif imperfectapproach whereby Parliament imposes concrete limitations.This approach gained some prominence in the context of the Brexit debate in regard to the domestication of EU law and the ministerial powers to correct deficiencies arising from withdrawal. 44It does operate as a backstop, providing an opportunity to Parliament to firmly express that there are decisions that cannot be made without being subject to full legislative scrutiny, such as amending significant constitutional statutes, creating new criminal offences, or making retrospective legislation. 45Either by preventing wideranging delegated powers clauses or by imposing substantive limits on the powers (no-go areas), Parliament is seeking to reinforce the bargain through such boundary-setting.
Several committees of Parliament operate to seek to identify and address potentially problematic proposed delegations during the legislative process.The separate Lords-only Committeethe DPRRCconsiders proposed ministerial powers to make regulations contained in proposed primary legislation.The DPRRC then makes a report containing recommendations on these proposed powers, although this is usually made after a Bill has passed through the Commons and before the Lords' Committee stage.Furthermore, other committees (notably the House of Lords Constitution Committee or, very rarely, the House of Commons Procedure Committee) may consider the implications of proposed delegations of law-making powers in particular Bills. 46 See House of Lords 'Companion to the standing orders and guide to the proceedings of the House of Lords' (2017) paras 11.51-52, https://www.parliament.uk/globalassets/documents/publications-records/house-of-lords-publications/rules-guidesfor-business/companion-to-standing-orders/companion-to-standing-orders-2017.pdf(last accessed 7 August 2023).See provisions are in force, other committees scrutinise their exercise.The Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments (JCSI), whose membership is drawn from both Houses of Parliament, applies 'technical scrutiny' 47 of delegated legislation by assessing whether an instrument falls within the remit outlined in the parent Act.The JCSI can decide whether to draw the special attention of each House to any instrument on the grounds that, for example, the relevant parent Act immunises a delegated instrument from challenge before the courts, or that there 'appears to be doubt about whether there is power to make it or that it appears to make an unusual or unexpected use of the power'. 48he JCSI can also draw attention to delegated legislation on the basis that 'there appears to have been unjustifiable delay in publishing it or laying it before Parliament'. 49The Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee (SLSC) is another Lords-only Committee that assesses the policy merits of all secondary legislation. 50There is also the Select Committee on Statutory Instruments (SCSI), comprised exclusively of MPs, which performs the same function as the JCSI.However, the SCSI considers secondary legislation which would not ordinarily be considered by the Lords, such as legislation relating to financial matters.
Notwithstanding this oversight of parent Acts, concern had been expressed prior to the pandemic that there was a 'growing tendency for the Government to introduce "skeleton bills", in which broad delegated powers are sought in lieu of policy detail' 51 so that Parliament was 'being asked to pass legislation without knowing how the powers conferred may be exercised by ministers and so without knowing what impact the legislation may have on members of the public affected by it'. 52It is thus clear that this part of the constitutional bargain has been under strain for some time.

(b) Executive self-restraint
The corresponding part of the constitutional bargain is that in making delegated legislation the executive should exercise self-restraint and not go beyond the scope of the powers provided in the relevant parent Act. 53We conceive this as encompassing both the formal principle of vires (ie that delegated legislation will be 'held by a court to be invalid if it has an effect, or is made for a purpose, which is ultra vires, that is, outside the scope of the statutory power pursuant to which it was purportedly made' 54 ), and a broader normative principle that, in order to respect parliamentary sovereignty, the Executive should exercise self-restraint in how it uses its delegated authority.
Such self-restraint comprises the Executive not stretching the limits of its delegated powers by using them to enact significant policy, or policy not directly or sufficiently relating to the description of powers given in the parent Act.Indeed, parliamentary committees have repeatedly stressed that significant policy change should not be enacted via delegated legislation even if doing so is strictly also Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee 'Special report: strengthened statutory procedures for the scrutiny of delegated powers' (Third Report of Session 2012-13, HL Paper 19).In a nutshell, the SLSC scrutinises every instrument or draft of an instrument from a 'policy merits' point of view, provided that such instrument or draft instrument is subject to a form of parliamentary procedure.

51
For example, in July 2015, the Chair of the Lords DPRRC, together with the Chairman of the Lord's Constitution Committee, wrote to the then Leader of the House of Commons expressing concern about 'skeleton bills'.That letter concluded that 'delegations of legislative power must be appropriate, the degree of flexibility afforded to ministers proportionate to the objectives set out in primary legislation, and … "skeleton" bills should be introduced only when absolutely necessary and with a full justification for the decision to adopt that structure of powers': Select Committee on the Constitution speaking intra vires. 55For example, the House of Lords Select Committee on the Constitution has stated 'it is essential' that 'primary legislation is used to legislate for policy, and major objectives' whereas delegated legislation must 'only be used to fill in the details'. 56It is clear that such restraint is a practical necessity in a context where the volume of delegated legislation passed every year is so high that the courts and Parliament combined are not capable of rigorous analysis of all such delegation.Moreover, some delegated powers currently in existence are very broad due to political circumstances, such as Brexit, in which the Government has claimed the need for flexibility. 57In some circumstances, the only means by which the system can realistically function effectively is if the Government exercises its legislative capacity, but in a way that is respectful of Parliament's position as principal law-maker.
This element of the bargain is not fully dependent on the degree of commitment that a minister may have towards the principles of parliamentary accountability and democracy.Internal governmental legality checks can contribute to upholding constitutional principle.Thus, governmental lawyers will be involved in the drafting of a statutory instrument and will advise ministers on the lawful exercise of delegated powers.These lawyers, for instance, may advise on any Convention rights compatibility issues, on the requirements and expectations of the JCSI or the SLSC, or on whether a proposed exercise of delegated powers might be vulnerable to judicial review. 58Recognising the limitations of the position of a civil servant whose ultimate role is to serve the government of the day, we submit that this interactionand indeed potential tensionbetween the political and the bureaucratic components of the executive may result in some level of governmental self-restraint. 59Nevertheless, strengthening this element of the bargain also depends on tightening existing guidance to express strong commitments towards constitutional principle.For instance, guidance indicates that a minister 'should volunteer his or her view regarding [a statutory instrument's] compatibility with the Convention rights'. 60While there is no equivalent legal requirement to the one imposed for the passage of Bills, 61 governmental commitment towards constitutional principle would be better served by clear and consistent practices of strengthening internal checks. 62(c) Meaningful parliamentary scrutiny Thirdly, and finally, the constitutional bargain requires an internal procedural structure, which comes in the form of parliamentary scrutiny of the use of powers to make delegated legislation.Parliamentary committees play a significant role in subjecting delegated legislation to scrutiny.The general principle is that the more extensive and/or controversial the delegated legislation, the greater the scrutiny Parliament should subject it to.63However, in practice, it is the form rather than the substance of 55 Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee Government by Diktat, above n 10, para 17; Fox and Blackwell, above n 32; Select Committee on the Constitution The Legislative Process, above n 25, paras 13-26.Small changes in practices and governmental undertakings can make a difference.During the process of domesticating EU law, one challenge for parliamentary committees in charge of scrutinising statutory instrument has been volume and flow.The government committed to control centrally the flow of instruments from various department to enable the SLSC and the JCSI to plan their workloads.See for instance Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee Government by Diktat, above n 10, paras 6 and 77-79.
the delegated legislation that determines much about the kind of scrutiny a statutory instrument receives.
'Draft affirmative instruments' are laid in draft and cannot come into effect until they have been debated and approved by both Houses.'Negative instruments' must be laid before Parliament for 40 days and can be rejected by a prayer motion. 64'Made affirmative instruments' come into force without approval of Parliament but require approval to remain in force beyond a period specified in the relevant parent Act (usually 28 or 40 sitting days). 65The kind of delegated legislation used in any case will be determined by the parent Act, which may in some cases also lay down strengthened scrutiny procedures for specified instruments. 66t least in principle, parliamentary scrutiny can 'square the circle' of the paradox of sovereignty/ delegation and the inherent limitations of relying on institutional self-restraint by Government.However, it has long been clear that there are limits to such scrutiny as a means of maintaining the constitutional bargain, which have prompted calls for an overhaul of parliamentary scrutiny procedures. 67These limits are both inherent and exogeneous.
The inherent limitations lie in the nature of parliamentary scrutiny itself, which as the SLSC has recently noted, is far less robust 68 than that afforded to primary legislation 69 in at least three ways: (i) delegated legislation is considered on an 'all or nothing' basis: it must be approved or disapproved in full and amendments are not possible; (ii) line by line scrutiny is not undertaken and delegated legislation is debated only once in each House; and relatedly (iii) rejection of a piece of delegated legislation is a 'very rare occurrence' 70 (and where it does happen can lead to 'significant constitutional consequences' 71 ).
Exogenous factors include the volume of delegated legislation (which by necessity reduces parliamentary capacity to subject it to robust scrutiny) and the extent to which governments enable rigorous scrutiny by, for example, encouraging and enabling prompt scrutiny and providing sufficient information to ensure that scrutiny is effective and meaningful.This is linked to two components of meaningful scrutiny for delegated law-making outlined by Tucker: public justification by the Government of the merits of the delegated legislation, and vulnerability of that legislation to defeat. 72hese two components clearly have the potential to shore up Parliament's role within delegated lawmaking and to ensure that delegation through primary legislation does not constitute a general licence to legislate without parliamentary engagement.However, as noted above, whether or not Parliament can actually undertake meaningful scrutiny is determined to a significant extent by the procedure used for secondary legislating.In this way, and as recently emphasised by David Judge, the proposition of effective parliamentary scrutiny assumes willingness by both Parliament to scrutinise and the Executive to be scrutinised. 73ell before the Covid-19 pandemic, scholars, parliamentarians, and NGOs had expressed concern about the extent to which delegated law-making was being used to unbalance the constitutional order.However, the pandemic was precisely the kind of situation in which one might expect that delegated  This is not to say that scrutiny of primary legislation is perfect, or even sufficiently robust in all cases.Indeed, we have previously highlighted significant shortcomings in Parliament's scrutiny of the CVA 2020: Grez Hidalgo et al, above n 5. law-making would be appropriate for reasons of urgency, technical complexity, and the need to be responsive to changing circumstances.It was also a time during which one might have expected parliamentary anxieties to be heightened by the scale of the delegation, the intrusiveness of the measures introduced in response to the pandemic, and the human and material costs of the disease and its broader implications.However, as a moment of significant stressindeed of emergencythe pandemic was also a context in which we might expect that strengths and weaknesses of existing systems might become visible.Indeed, that was the case in respect of delegated law-making in which, as we now turn to consider, the fraying edges of the constitutional bargain were exposed.
2. Delegated law-making in the pandemic: a further frayed bargain?Our assessment of a sample of delegated legislation during the first year of the pandemic revealed that all three limbs of the constitutional bargain were undermined, as set out below.This is despite there being instances of good practice, particularly on the part of parliamentary committees and parliamentarians, in seeking to scrutinise delegated legislation.
(a) Skeleton legislation: Parliament's failure to delimit delegated law-making power The majority of delegated legislation drafted and enacted during the pandemic, and 65 of the 81 regulations we considered in our sample were made under the authority of Part 2A of the PHA 1984 which is properly understood as a skeleton provision. 74Among other things, Part 2A provides a power to make regulations to prohibit events or gatherings, 75 to impose restrictions or requirements relating to dead bodies, 76 and to 'impose or enable the imposition of restrictions or requirements on or in relation to persons, things or premises in the event of, or in response to, a threat to public health'. 77These regulations may create criminal offences punishable by fines, permit or prohibit the levying of charges, confer functions on local authorities and other persons, and be imposed on the population as a whole, 78 although there are some requirements (for example, to submit to a medical examination) that cannot be imposed by such a regulation. 79Clearly, these are extremely wide powers indeed; as the Court of Appeal put it in Dolan '[t]he words of [section 45C(1)] could not be broader'. 80Within the parent Act, the only substantive restrictions are requirements that the measures would be 'consider[ed]' proportionate, and be 'made in response to a serious and imminent threat to public health'. 81Sections of the PHA 1984 are thus properly described and understood as skeleton provisions, so that the degree of latitude it provides to the Government is substantial.
Of course, there is an argument that this is appropriate; that the PHA 1984 rightly seeks not to be overly prescriptive because it was made in anticipation of a public health crisis, the exact nature of which could not have been foreseen.Indeed, Part 2A of the PHA 1984 was substantively introduced by amendment in 2008 and in anticipation of what the Court of Appeal has described as 'a modern epidemic such as that caused by SARS' 82 in the early 2000s.However, and importantly, these skeleton provisions on which the government did heavily rely do not seem to contain any real safeguards against the use of the authority delegated under them in situations where, in reality, Parliament was both ready and willing to take on a more proactive legislative role.

Legal Studies
Part 2A of the PHA 1984 contains almost no limitations on ministerial power to make regulations under it; domestic regulations for health protection may only be made where the relevant minister 'considers … that the restriction or requirement is proportionate to what is sought to be achieved by imposing it', 83 and special restrictions or requirements may only be made if they are 'in response to a serious and imminent threat to public health' 84 or their imposition is made contingent on there being such a threat. 85The first of these so-called restrictions adds nothing to what is now the general public law duty of proportionality or to the effects of the proportionality test as applied under the Human Rights Act 1998 86 (both of which were established by 2008 when the relevant provisions were inserted into the PHA 1984), while the latter appears to have no significant limiting function as the triggering condition (the existence of 'a serious and imminent threat to public health') is the subject of a subjective judgement on the part of the relevant minister, albeit subject to judicial review for vires should proceedings challenging the lawfulness of any such regulations be taken.Notably, it seems likely that any such challenge would face considerable hurdles in seeking to establish a lack of vires given that, as the Court of Appeal put it, 'the purpose of [Part 2A] clearly included giving the relevant Minister the ability to make an effective public health response to a widespread epidemic such as the one that SARS might have caused and which Covid-19 has now caused'. 87lthough just one of the regulations in our sample were made under the CVA 2020, this legislation, passed at great haste at the beginning of the pandemic in March 2020, is also properly understood as containing various skeleton provisions.As we have discussed elsewhere, parliamentarians were given just four days and 13 hours of debate time to consider the provisions in the CVA 2020, 88 yet it contains broad powers to create delegated legislation, including Henry VIII powers. 89For example, it contains provisions for the Secretary of State to modify the Police Act 1997, the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Scotland) Act 2000 and the Investigatory Powers Act 2016 to apply them to temporary commissioners and make consequential changes using the negative resolution procedure. 90The CVA 2020 also created new powers to create delegated legislation through devolving powers of the kind contained in the PHA 1984 to Scotland and Northern Ireland. 91Indeed, when the CVA 2020 was going through Parliament, the Shadow Health Secretary, Jonathan Ashworth MP, in stating that the Labour Party would reluctantly support the Act, described such powers as the 'most draconian … ever seen in peacetime Britain', and referred to the 'huge potential for abuse' of such powers 'however well intended and needed'. 92Moreover, as situation-specific (ie Covid-19 related only) legislation, the CVA 2020 does not contain tests of necessity and imminent threat such as those found in the PHA 1984.Rather, the safeguards are primarily in the form of (what we elsewhere argue are weak 93 ) procedural mechanisms purported to ensure a degree of parliamentary oversight of the exercise of such powers.
In legislation passed both before and during the pandemic, then, Parliament enacted skeleton legislation giving extremely broad delegated law-making powers to the Government subject to weak statutory limitations, so that the first element of the bargain was undermined.(b) Lack of executive self-restraint in the use of delegated authority One might argue that what really matters in this context is not necessarily whether the government could avail of delegated law-making powers under skeleton legislation, but what it did with those powers.In other words, we concede that a public health emergency might be considered one of the (perhaps rare) settings where broad authority is required and appropriate.This is consistent with the nature of the PHA 1984 and CVA 2020 as Acts that were consciously constructed in skeleton form and intended to give the Government all relevant and necessary powers to address a widespread and dangerous public health emergency.The quid pro quo in a healthy constitutional system must, however, be that the gravity of such a delegation of power would be recognised and reflected in Executive self-restraint in its use.As stated above, such self-restraint comprises both technical compliance with the requirement of vires and not stretching the limits of delegated powers by seeking to enact significant policy or address issues only remotely connected to the rationale for delegation through secondary legislation.However, our sample reveals three trends that suggest a failure to exercise self-restraint during the pandemic: increased parliamentary reports of potential ultra vires law-making; policy formation by delegated legislation; and policy laundering.
Throughout the pandemic, concern has been expressed that the Executive did not ensure vires in respect of all regulations.For instance, with respect to sub-delegation of powers, the JCSI has stated that it 'reported an unusual number of provisions for doubt as to whether they were intra vires' with respect to the Covid-19 regulations. 94Other examples concern regulations that gave the Government powers temporarily to release prisoners under a direction 'framed by reference to whatever matters the Secretary of State considers appropriate', 95 and the Health Protection (Coronavirus,  Public Health Information for Passengers Travelling to England) Regulations 2020. 96The JCSI's concerns reflected the breadth of the regulations concerning passengers travelling to England, which it considered may have gone beyond the powers given to the Executive in section 45F(2)(a) of the PHA 1984. 97Doubts were expressed by the Committee with respect to four further regulations passed within the time period of our analysis, 98 although these were not debated.
Secondly, delegated legislation has been used during the pandemic for the creation and pursuit of substantial policy.In our sample, we identified eight regulations enacting either a major change to the detail of, or complete change of direction in, the Government's approach to managing the pandemic. 99ere we are referring to regulations that introduced a novel nationwide pandemic-response strategy imposing new requirements on the population through a scheme or approach not outlined in primary legislation.A key example of the creation of substantial policy through delegated legislation is provided by regulations introducing and amending local management measures, which became the 'tier system'. 100The tier system determined when and how specific restrictions, many of which implicated human rights, were applied according to Government-defined tiers imposed across different regions in England.The tier level accorded to the severity of restrictions that could be imposed in a particular region, which the Government assigned based on recommendations from scientists and medics taking into account a number of factors including local infection rates and pressure on the NHS.
In debating the initial (ie pre-tier) regulations introducing local restrictions, some Peers expressed dissatisfaction that such extensive and substantive policy measures were being introduced through delegated legislation.For example, Lord Scriven (Liberal Democrats) stated in September 2020 that '[n]o longer should Whitehall know best, nor emergency legislation without the proper scrutiny and revision by Parliament be enacted from the tip of a Minister's pen, when there are significant implications for people's freedoms and business survival'. 101He further argued that '[r]ather than continual emergency legislation on the back of a fag packet, a competent Government would have sat down with the local government and come up with powers and legislation useful…to keep people safe'. 102Lord Scriven's statement is exemplary of a significant level of discomfort expressed by some parliamentarians at the scale of the pandemic response being pushed through via delegated rather than primary legislation. 103hat parliamentarians would have this response to the Government's enacting of a nationwide new strategy for responding to the pandemic via delegated legislation is understandable.Such a strategy does not constitute merely filling in the details of a policy developed by Parliament but is rather a distinct new model of pandemic management that Parliament had no say in moulding due to its inability to amend the secondary legislation.Under this new model, the Government gave itself broad powers to shape and pursue the pandemic response in the sense that it passed powers to impose local restrictions on the basis of criteria mirroring the PHA 1984 (which, as referred to above, required there to be a serious and imminent public health threat requiring such measures to be necessary before these measures could be imposed). 104As highlighted by both the Health and Social Care Committee and the Science and Technology Committee, this enabled the Government to impose local restrictions that were not 'fully clear' and failed to outline 'what would be required to exit a particular strategy'. 105ransforming the management of the pandemic from the imposition of general restrictions via regulations to the imposition of local restrictions via ministerial direction, where the criteria for such imposition is lacking in clarity, represents a significant gear change in the overall governance of the pandemic.Regulations introducing this new approach thus represent an example of the Government stretching the limits of its delegated powers under the PHA 1984 by using such provisions not merely to impose specific restrictions but to introduce a new system for imposing restrictions 100 The first regulations to introduce the local management system were the Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (England) (No 3) Regulations 2020, which came into effect on 18 July 2020.The system was amended from being a 3-tier system to a 4-tier system by The Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (All Tiers) (England) Regulations 2020, which came into force on 2 December 2020.Several other regulations related to this substantive policy issue were also introduced during the first year of the pandemic.For example, the Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (Self-Isolation and Linked Households) (England) Regulations 2020, the Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (All Tiers) (England) (Amendment) (No 4) Regulations 2020, the Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (All Tiers) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2021, and Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (All Tiers And Self-Isolation) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2021, all made amendments to the tier system applicable in England.that substantially empowered the Government.The argument here falls short of claiming that this new system is ultra vires.106Rather, we take the view that after the initial response, there was room to rethink the government's approach and to craft a legal response to the pandemic in which primary legislation had a more significant role.It is not at all clear why primary legislation could not have been used to introduce the tier system, or at least the core principles and rules of such system.At the time of these regulations the Government was engaged in significant primary law-making in relation to non-urgent non-pandemic-related matters which it could have deprioritised for the purpose of passing pandemic-related primary legislation107 further illustrating how, through passing regulations in this way, the Government did not act with the self-restraint needed to maintain the integrity of the constitutional bargain of delegated law-making.
The third feature of the regulations suggesting the Executive did not act with self-restraint is its engagement in 'policy laundering' in passing pandemic regulations.Policy laundering is a 'practice where policy makers make use of other jurisdictions to further their goals' 108 and while usually used to describe 'jurisdiction-hopping' between national and transnational spaces, also captures neatly the use of one form of authority (in this case authority to make pandemic-related regulations) in pursuit of unrelated goals.Our sample offers two examples of such policy laundering: the Town and Country Planning (Permitted Development and Miscellaneous Amendments) (England) (Coronavirus) Regulations 2020 (the TCP Regulations) and the Electric Scooter Trials and Traffic Signs (Coronavirus) Regulations and General Directions 2020 (the EST Regulations).Both regulations, made using negative procedures, have 'Coronavirus' in their title, but their connection to the management of and response to the pandemic is far from clear.
The TCP regulations relaxed planning restrictions as part of a post-coronavirus economic renewal package, 109 but as pointed out in the House of Lords, the connection to the pandemic was tenuous.Lord German (Liberal Democrats) noted that 'only one' out of the two regulations in the package was related to the coronavirus 110 and that the second regulation was 'both permanent and totally unrelated to the present pandemic'.Why, he wondered, was this change to planning law being 'misrepresented as a response to the coronavirus health issue'? 111Indeed, so strong was the concern that Baroness Wilcox (Liberal Democrats) tabled a motion of regret, although it was eventually not moved.The EST Regulations amended road traffic regulations to allow representative on-road trials of e-scooters to gather evidence on the use and impact of e-scooters, which might also impact on possible future legislation.The SLSC drew these Regulations to the attention of the House of Lords, 112 while the Department for Transport stated that it considered urgent action was required to provide immediate additional transport capacity, which had been severely restricted by the impact of Covid-19, a justification for which the SLSC stated there was insufficient evidence or consultation. 113As noted in the House of Lords, there appeared to be no rational link between the Regulations and the Covid pandemic, and the Regulations related to 'a major mode of transport development that will affect us all for the long term and way beyond, by comparison, any much shorter-term Covid-19 considerations on addressing transport capacity issues and allowing for social distancing'. 114In other words, as Lord German put it, delegated legislation was being used to allow 'major policy change [to be] side-slipped through Parliament, first, under the cover of a response to the coronavirus crisis and, secondly, by the use of the negative procedure'. 115

(c) Denying Parliament meaningful scrutiny
The third and final limb of the constitutional bargainenabling meaningful parliamentary scrutinywas also undermined during the pandemic.In the sample that we examined, the Executive consistently elected to use scrutiny-minimising, rather than scrutiny-enabling, mechanisms of making secondary legislation, with 67 out of the 81 statutory instruments we analysed being made using the made affirmative procedure (MAP).The work of the Hansard Society suggests this is representative of the broader practice in pandemic-related delegated law-making.It has found that from the beginning of our timeframe, 9 March 2020, to 26 February 2021, 356 of 415 Covid-19-related statutory instruments had been made using negative procedures.In other words, at least 356 of such regulations entered into force without a draft bring presented in advance to Parliament, and thus without parliamentary scrutiny of their justification, proportionality, and urgency. 116f the 67 regulations in our sample that were made using the MAP, 65 were made using the MAP power set out in section 45R of the PHA 1984.This provides that delegated legislation may be passed under the PHA 1984 using MAP 'if the instrument contains a declaration that the person making it is of the opinion that, by reason of urgency, it is necessary to make the order without a draft being so laid and approved'.The other regulations in our sample not made using the MAP were instead made using the draft affirmative procedure or Super Affirmative procedure (10) or using the negative procedure and Made Negative procedure and identified by Parliament as needing to be debated by Parliament (3) and not subject to procedure as they were not fully drafted (1). 117In the first instance, then, the sample we examined suggests an Executive inclination towards making delegated legislation by means of processes that are designed to maximise Executive room for manoeuvre and minimise parliamentary involvement and which should, ipso facto, be used sparingly.This is not least becauseto return to Tuckerthey reduce the opportunities for public justification by the Executive either of the content of the regulations or of the claims of urgency that underpin the decision primarily to promulgate them using such processes. 118This undermined the extent to which parliament could subject such regulations to meaningful scrutiny.
Notably, such public justification was also undermined by the fact that in relation to all but one set of regulations no impact assessment was provided. 119The only impact assessment provided was with respect to the Town and Country Planning (Permitted Development and Miscellaneous Amendments) (England) (Coronavirus) Regulations 2020.This meant that with respect to all other Covid-19 regulations examined in our analysis, the Government provided parliamentarians with no information as to their specific impact on human rights or equalities, even though parliamentarians consistently complained about the absence of such assessments. 120Importantly, without such assessments, parliamentarians are stymied in effectively ascertaining the proportionality of such regulations, and therefore assessing their merits in an evidence-based way.This further limited Parliament's ability to engage in meaningful scrutiny of the regulations.
Meaningful scrutiny, in the sense defined by Tucker, was also undermined due to the speed at which regulations were being made, which often rendered the regulations essentially invulnerable to defeat.This is due to the tendency of the Government to schedule debates right at the end of the relevant period allowed for a regulation to be in force before Parliament must consider it (usually 28 sitting days).This tendency meant that in many cases parliamentary scrutiny took place when the relevant regulations had been superseded by new delegated legislation.In our sample, 10 regulations were scrutinised over a total of 9.8 hours of debate after they had already expired or been amended so as to render the debate on such regulations 'academic' 121 and, of course, to remove any opportunity for the regulations to be defeated (Table 1).Instead, these regulations could be introduced, brought into force, and enforcedsometimes with consequences like criminal liabilityand then superseded, expired, or revised by new regulations before Parliament ever got to consider them.These 10 regulations included Covid-19 regulations with significant implications for human rights, whichbecause of both how they were made and the Government's decision to take advantage of the maximum period of time they could operate before being subjected to a parliamentary processwere, in practice, shielded entirely from parliamentary supervision and meaningful scrutiny.This was the subject of repeated protest from both MPs and Lords over the first year of the pandemic.For example, during the debate on the superseded Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (England) (Amendment) (No 3) Regulations 2020, Lord Scriven (Liberal Democrats) exclaimed that '[l]ike lapdogs, we are discussing regulations that we cannot influence, revise or halt.Ministers sit in an office and decide the law, knowing that they are immune from normal parliamentary procedures and cannot be held to account'. 122On 8 February 2021, while debating the Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (All Tiers) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2021, Justin Madders MP (Labour) lamented that 'we are once again retrospectively approving legislation, particularly regulations that have a dramatic impact on individuals' liberty, as well as an economic impact'. 123Such a statement is symbolic of the deep concern regarding the scheduling of the debates on regulations, and the impact such scheduling had on parliamentary scrutiny which was regularly expressed by parliamentarians throughout the year featured in our analysis.
In addition to regulations being debated after having been superseded, other regulations were debated after having been in force for a significant period of time.A total of 29 parliamentary debates on the Covid-19 regulations in our sample took place after the regulations had already been in force (in part or in full) for 25 calendar days or more.Importantly, while defeat was a possibility once parliamentary scrutiny was then applied, such a defeat would in practice be of little consequence to the Government considering the pace at which regulations were being passed.Moreover, at this stage, businesses, institutions, and public authorities such as the police were already abiding by and enforcing these regulations, investing where necessary to accommodate them.In other words, the Government effectively developed a practice of continually passing regulations with a view to only keeping them in force until just before the deadline for parliamentary approval and scheduling parliamentary debates right at the end of this time, by which point new regulations would be implemented.Indeed, this is 120 For example, Sir Christopher Chope (Conservative MP) made such a complaint while scrutinising The Public Health (Coronavirus) (Protection from Eviction) (England) (No 2) Regulations 2021 in the Delegated Legislation Committee.Sir Christopher highlighted that the regulations 'like so many others, do not have an impact assessment'.The Government had argued that it was not necessary to provide one.Chope vehemently disagreed with this conclusion, emphasising that the 'Minister himself has said that a careful balancing act must [sic] be conducted, taking into account competing interests' and that '[t]herefore, we owe it to Parliament and to the process of scrutiny to be able to see the Government's workings': HC DLC (9 March 2021) cols 1 -10.essentially what happened during the period of pandemic delegated law-making we examined. 124As a result of the handling of procedural matters surrounding the pandemic delegated legislation in this way, and as set out in the paragraphs above, in many cases Parliament was prevented from exerting meaningful scrutiny of such regulations.

Conclusion
The failures to adhere to the constitutional bargain of delegated law-making during the pandemic that we observe, and which are substantiated by the sample analysis undertaken here, had tangible consequences including, but going beyond, the constitutional damage they may have inflicted.It is appropriate to pause to recall that the harms the constitutional bargain seeks to mitigate can be material as well as institutional.As the Select Committee on the Constitution has noted, the lack of meaningful scrutiny by Parliament created further leeway for the Government to make errors in its regulations, 125  As highlighted by the Select Committee on the Constitution, which emphasised that 'limiting the time available for parliamentary scrutiny also gives rise to an increased risk of legal errors and unintended consequences' in pandemic delegated legislation: see ibid, para 15. and many parliamentarians commented on the fact that regulations frequently contained mistakes that were sometimes 'corrected' by later regulations. 126Moreover, the pace and volume of regulationmaking resulted in confusion about what the law required, of whom, when, and in what circumstances, and it was noted that little seemed to be done to support persons with impaired capacity to understand and abide by the regulations.The potential for this was repeatedly cited by the House of Lords. 127hile pace, volume, incoherence, and poor communication cannot be attributed solely to the reliance on delegated law-making, it seems clear that the effective invulnerability of regulations to defeat and the marginalisation of Parliament as scrutiniser meant that the usual institutional incentives towards coherence and political acceptability may not have operated as keenly in the pandemic as we might ordinarily expect.This clearly contributed to a culture of sub-optimal regulatory quality in a context where people's health and lives were dependent on their impact and effective operation. 128lthough the prolific use of delegated legislation in the pandemic has attracted significant attention, the analysis that we outline is best understood as illustrating the broad and persistent challenges with delegated law-making that, as discussed above, have long been recognised by Parliament and scholars.Over the course of the pandemic these challenges have crystallised in a context of the general marginalisation of Parliament that both we and others have already remarked upon, 129 and which is itself an intensification of a longer-standing trend of the Government eroding Parliament's standing within the UK constitution. 130During the pandemic the heavy reliance on delegated legislation, brusque and sometimes performative engagement with parliamentary oversight, and simultaneous pursuit of an ambitious legislative agenda and significant constitutional change (most notably relating to Brexit) certainly suggests an Executive determined to prosecute its policy agenda regardless of the strains imposed by and in the Covid-19 pandemic.Combined with the current government's significant parliamentary majority, the acquisition and deployment of significant amounts of discretion 131 and of relatively unscrutinised power, including delegated legislative power, over the last two years makes visible the degree to which Executive dominance is not only possible but operationalised in Parliament.The breakdown of the constitutional bargain that, at least in principle, underpins 126 For example, see commentary from Justin Madders, who emphasised there were a high number of unnecessary errors in the regulations he had examined: HC DLC (8 February 2021) col 7.
127 See for example the intervention of Baroness Bull: Hansard HL Deb, vol 805, col 471, 3 September 2020.128   The Health and Social Care, and Science and Technology Committee described the tier system introduced by the regulations as 'unsatisfactory'.See Health and Social Care, and Science and Technology Committees, above n 105, paras 115-124.The JCSI described the manner in which the Tier regulations were introduced as contributing to a great deal of confusion and uncertainty during the pandemic.See Rule of Law Themes from Covid-19 Regulations, above n 10, paras 62-73.The Constitution Society, above n 107; A Walker 'The government's approach to the UK constitution: cause for concern' (The Constitution Society, 7 September 2021) https://consoc.org.uk/the-governments-approach-to-the-uk-constitutioncause-for-concern/(last accessed 7 August 2023); A Blick and P Hennessy 'Good chaps no more?Safeguarding the constitution in stressful times' (The Constitution Society, 18 November 2019) https://consoc.org.uk/publications/good-chaps-nomore-safeguarding-the-constitution-in-stressful-times-by-andrew-blick-and-peter-hennessy/(last accessed 7 August 2023); M Hunt 'Parliament must tell this overreaching executive: '"Not in our name"' (Prospect 11 September 2020) https:// www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/parliament-overreaching-executive-brexit-withdrawal-agreement-international-law (last accessed 7 August 2023); B Ward 'Britain's democratic fabric is being eroded by Boris Johnson's government' (Human Rights Watch 26 October 2020) https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/10/26/britains-democratic-fabric-being-eroded-borisjohnsons-government(last accessed 7 August 2023).Legal Studies delegated law-making during the pandemic is an exposition rather than a source of this dominance and its corrosive effects on core tenets of the UK constitution: parliamentary supremacy and associated accountability to Parliament.Thus, the practice of delegated law-making during the Covid-19 regulations exposes what is a deep constitutional conundrum in the UK.
We note that certain of the dynamics set out above were replicated in comparative Westminster jurisdictions. 132For example, in Australia the Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Delegated Legislation expressed concerns regarding the use of delegated legislation during the pandemic. 133In that jurisdiction, a sizeable proportion of delegated legislation passed during the pandemic was exempt from parliamentary scrutiny, and scrutiny per se was significantly impacted by long-term suspension of the Commonwealth Parliament. 134However, these patterns of excessive delegation and limited parliamentary scrutiny were neither inevitable nor universal.New Zealand experienced an early course correction with respect to the use of delegated legislation.In its August 2020 review of delegation, the Regulations Review Committee found that government departments had been 'receptive' to feedback expressing concern about the lack of clarity of some Covid-19 regulations, following which the quality of secondary legislation 'significantly improved'. 135his 'positive influence' of the Regulations Review Committee is reflective of the New Zealand Government's willingness to engage effectively with Parliament and of the broader constitutionalist mindset that Government exhibited throughout the pandemic. 136ndeed, as in New Zealand, delegated law-making in the United Kingdom is not a problem without a solution.As shown in Part 2, seeking to design a mode of balancing the (legitimate) need for delegated law-making with the constitutional imperative for parliamentary supremacy has long been a preoccupation of key actors, including parliamentary committees.Across all three dimensions of the constitutional bargain, changes that would better maintain constitutional equilibrium are possible.Both scholars and parliamentarians have made clear and simple suggestions for reform in the UK context, that may yet serve to mitigate against the problems we have identified. 137For example, the DPRRC has proposed avoiding skeleton legislation, except where necessary and fully justified. 138The proposal recommends the use of a 'skeleton bill declaration' to identify legislation the Government considers to contain skeleton provisions. 139Under this scheme, the Executive would be required to make a declaration in an accompanying delegated powers memorandum that a Bill should be understood as creating a skeleton provision, with the DPRRC having a The New Zealand government's general approach to parliamentary scrutiny is reflective the kind of constitutional disposition towards accountability that we advocate in this piece.This disposition is not limited to pandemic regulation making but extends to Prime Minister and ministerial statements, answers to oral and written questions, among others.See D Knight 'New Zealand: legal response to Covid-19' in J King and O Ferraz (eds) The Oxford Compendium of National Legal Responses to Covid-19 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021) paras 40-46.See also DR Knight 'Accountability through dialogue' in Grogan and Donald, above n 13; DR Knight 'Law-making and accountability in responding to Covid-19: the case of New Zealand' (Melbourne Forum on Constitution-Building) https://law.unimelb.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0008/3476537/MF20-Web2-NZ-Knight-FINAL.pdf (last accessed 7 August 2023).power of scrutiny reserved.When such a declaration is made, the DPRRC and Parliament at large are on notice that what they are being asked to introduce is a skeleton provision and, according to the principle of delimiting delegated power, should proceed with great caution in considering whether this is appropriate, or whether a more limited delegation of law-making power would be preferable.This offers them a prompt to require justification from Government and to subject that justification to robust scrutiny. 140urther, simple proposals have been made with a view to compelling executive self-restraint.These include proposals to include sunset clauses in primary legislation to make clear the expectation that the Government will seek to revert to ordinary law-making at the earliest possible opportunity. 141his can be achieved not only by ensuring that sunset clauses give rise to expiry/renewal debates in good time (and certainly sooner than two years from the introduction of emergency legislation), but also by treating those sunset debates as situations of meaningful jeopardy for the government.In the pandemic, for example, the CVA 2020 foresaw its expiry two years after its introduction but allowed for both the earlier expiration of particular powers therein (and, indeed, many powers were expired early) and the extension of certain powers beyond the sunset. 142However, the broad framework that the CVA 2020 created to govern significant parts of the pandemic response, including the general turn to delegated law-making, was not up for meaningful revision by Parliament within its two-year existence; as we have noted elsewhere, its built-in review mechanisms were ineffective by design. 143here are also proposals to empower Parliament to exert proper scrutiny on delegated legislation.This includes a long-standing proposal for a sifting committee with power to determine the level of parliamentary scrutiny particular instruments would receive. 144One was established in response to the legislation governing the UK's withdrawal from the European Union.Following the inclusion of exceptionally broad powers to create delegated legislation, including Henry VIII powers, in section 8 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018, a new Commons committee, the European Statutory Instruments Committee, was established to examine and report on Government decisions to subject delegated legislation to negative procedures. 145The SLSC added a similar function to its remit. 146As a result, the SLSC considers the policy effects of statutory instruments and the type of procedure delegated legislation should be subject to. 147There is no equivalent body made up of MPs that performs a similar function.Thus, there remains scope to enhance the scrutiny of delegated legislation through the establishment of a body specifically designed for MPs to sift such legislation and determine what kind of procedure they should be subject to.

140
The government disagreed with the recommendation to have a 'skeleton bill declaration' (on the grounds that it would be difficult to define what a skeleton bill is) and to introduce a 'scrutiny reserve' (expressing that it had 'strong reservations' but without fleshing out what those reservations were).See Letter of the Leader of the House of Commons to the chairman of the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee, 24 January 2022, available at https://committees.parliament.uk/publications/8672/documents/88067/default/ (last accessed 7 August 2023).

Legal Studies
Even if such a sifting committee were established, however, the likelihood is that in a situation of urgency or exigencysuch as that faced in the Covid-19 pandemicthe volume of regulations and pressures of time might mean that scrutiny gaps would appear in any future public health emergency.The question that then arises is whether we really need to continue to do things in the way that we do them now.Even bearing in mind that exact epidemiological and social conditions will vary across public health crises, and that different diseases will have different characteristics and behavioural patterns, the general sense of the kinds of powers that might be needed to safeguard public health can largely be predicted.Indeed, they are predicted in the PHA 1984 as amended which, as already noted, has been the primary source of regulations over the course of the pandemic.We know this not only from local and comparative experience, but also from the international best practice and standards that exist to support states in ensuring preparedness for future emergencies. 148Thus, while the exact scale, scope, and perhaps combination of measures that might be considered necessary in each situation may only be determinable within the concrete conditions of a crisis, the nature and possible scales of those interventions can be foreseen and, thus, can be debated in advance.This kind of preparatory practice would not bind the government, which would still have the capacity to adapt to the realities of the situation it sought to address, but it would provide a previously scrutinised set of principles and indication of approach to proportionality, necessity, and appropriateness to guide Ministers and provide Parliament with a jumping-off point for concrete scrutiny.Legislative and regulatory preparedness of this kind would indicate a shift to crisis management in situations of reasonably foreseeable exigency and recognise that scrutiny of crisis responses can have different temporalities to those imposed by the immediacy of an emergency. 149Although there were some indications that provisions of the CVA 2020 had been drafted in the context of 'Exercise Cygnus',150 as the Constitution Committee noted, these were not subject to parliamentary consultation,151 thus representing a missed opportunity to enhance the legitimacy ofand potentially improve Parliament's input onthe UK government's response to the emergency.
The obvious contention that improving safeguards and parliamentary accountability in a public emergency context is a matter of political will has been recently confirmed by the enactment by the Scottish Parliament of the Coronavirus (Recovery and Reform) (Scotland) Act 2022.Section 1 of this Act amends the Public Health etc (Scotland) Act 2008, which provides the Scottish legislative framework for the legal response to a public health emergency.Crucially, the amendments introduced a new requirement to trigger emergency law-making powers in the form of a 'public health declaration' (new section 86B).These declarations can only be made if 'an infectious disease or contaminant constitutes or may constitute a danger to human health' and public health regulations 'may be a way of  One option would be to rely on the practice of drafting legislation that can be 'saved' for use in foreseeable future contexts but debated outside of the exigencies of these contexts.The advantage of this approach is that the powers are formulated, debated, and agreed on at a time in which the Government and Parliament are not under strain, which is likely to encourage a more limited approach to defining delegated law-making powers.Such an approach is not alien to Parliament.One example of this kind of draft legislation is the Draft Enhanced Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures (TPIMs) Bill, which was drafted under then Home Secretary, Theresa May, and debated in 2012.The Bill was drafted in anticipation of the need for the stronger counter-terrorism measures in the future, outlined when enhanced measures could be used, and what kinds of controls they could impose on suspected terrorists.
protecting against this danger'.This declaration must be laid before Parliament and approved by a motion.There is a duty on ministers to revoke this declaration if the conditions for its making no longer apply, with the effect of ceasing the power to make public health regulations.Other significant amendments are to provide in primary legislation the sort of things that ministers can do in exercising the powers, specific substantive limitations on the emergency law-making powers and review processes. 152hile there is still room for improving this framework, the Scottish 2022 Act illustrates that another, more accountable, approach to delegation in public health emergencies is possible.It reinforces the impression, gleaned also from the recently suggested reforms considered above, that there is no shortage of proposals to strengthen the constitutional bargain of delegated legislation.What is lacking is the political will to wean governments off the power to make law unscrutinised.2), (4)(c), ( 5), (6)(a) and (c), ( 7), ( 8

24J
King 'The province of delegated legislation' in E Fisher et al (eds) The Foundations and Future of Public Law: Essays in Honour of Paul Craig (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2020) pp 150-151; Donoughmore Report, above n 2, p 14. 25 See, for example, Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments Special Report

37A
Tucker 'Parliamentary scrutiny of delegated legislation' in A Horne and G Drewry (eds) Parliament and the Law (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2018) p 356; J Chalmers and F Leverick 'Criminal law in the shadows: creating offences in delegated legislation' (2018) 38(2) Legal Studies 221.
(a) Proper limitation of delegation by Parliament

47
The full constitution and powers of the Committee are set out in House of Commons Standing Order No 151 and House of Lords Standing Order No 73, relating to Public Business.

56Select
Committee on the Constitution The 'Great Repeal Bill' and Delegated Powers (Ninth Report of Session 2016-17, HL Paper 123) para 25. 57 For example, see the delegated powers contained in the European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020, s 8. 58 C Casey 'The law officers: the relationship between executive lawyers and executive power in Ireland and the United Kingdom' in O Doyle et al (eds) The Brexit Challenge for Ireland and the United Kingdom: Constitutions Under Pressure (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021); B Yong 'Government lawyers and the provision of legal advice within Whitehall' (The Constitution Unit, 2013).59 N Barber 'Self-defence for institutions' (2013) 72(3) Cambridge Law Journal 558.60 National Archives Statutory Instrument Practice (5th edn, November 2017) para 2.12.61 Human Rights Act 1998, s 19. 62 64 Statutory Instruments Act 1946, ss 4-7.See also R Kelly Statutory Instruments (House of Commons Library, Briefing Paper Number 06509, 15 December 2016) 7-11. in Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee Democracy Denied, above n 10. 67 R Fox and J Blackwell The Devil is in the Detail: Parliament and Delegated Legislation (Hansard Society 2014); R Fox et al Taking Back Control for Brexit and Beyond(Hansard Society, 2017). 68 69Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee Government by Diktat, above n 10, para 18. 70 Ibid.71 Ibid.See also Lord Strathclyde Strathclyde Review: Secondary Legislation and the Primacy of the House of Commons (Cm 9177, December 2015).72 Tucker, above n 37, p 363. 73 D Judge 'Walking the dark side: evading parliamentary scrutiny' (2021) 92(2) The Political Quarterly 283; KD Ewing 'Covid-19: government by decree' (2020) 31(1) King's Law Journal 1.
interferences with qualified rights in the European Convention on Human Rights, which are given effect in UK law via section of the Human Rights Act 1998.
see statements made by Justin Madders MP (Labour) during the Delegated Legislation Committee scrutiny of Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (England) (Amendment) (No 2) Regulations 2020, who stated that the 'wide-ranging effect of the measures' demanded 'full scrutiny', describing the process of scrutiny at that time being imposed on Parliament as representing a 'procedural formality, a rubber-stamping exercise to create the veneer of a democratic process'.See HC DLC (10 June 2020) cols 6-11.104 PHA 1984, s 45D(4)(a).105 Health and Social Care, and Science and Technology Committees 'Coronavirus: lessons learned to date' (Sixth Report of the Health and Social Care Committee and Third Report of the Science and Technology Committee of Session 2021-22 HC 92) para 121.

Hansard
HL Deb, vol 806, col 138, 29 September 2020, per Lord Rosser (Labour).115 See n 110 above, col 941.116 See the Hansard Society tracker, above n 9. 117 These were the TCP Regulations and the EST Regulations.118 Tucker, above n 37, p 356.119A lack of impact assessments provided by the Government was also an issue highlighted by SLSC with respect to pandemic delegated legislation.See Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee Government by Diktat, above n 10, paras 67-71.

124
This rapid making and repealing of legislation has also been the subject of criticism by the Lords' Select Committee on the Constitution.See Select Committee on the Constitution 'Covid-19 and the use and scrutiny of emergency powers' (3rd Report of Session 2021-22, HL Paper 15, 10 June 2021) paras 179-188.125

131M
Cohn A Theory of the Executive Branch: Tension and Legality (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021).

132P
Dey and JR Murphy 'Pandemic parliamentary oversight of delegated legislation: comparing the performance of Westminster systems' (2021) 15(4) ICL Journal 465.133 Australian Senate Standing Committee on Regulations and Ordinances 'Parliamentary scrutiny of delegated legislation (Inquiry Report, 3 June 2019) p 10. 134 M Rizzi and T Tulich 'Australia: all bets on the Executive' in Grogan and Donald, above n 13, p 465. 135 New Zealand Regulations Review Committee 'Briefing to review secondary legislation made in response to Covid-19' (Final Report) (August 2020) p 3.136

137
For example, see Tucker, above n 37; K Strøm et al Delegation and Accountability in Parliamentary Democracies (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2003); Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee Government by Diktat, above n 10; Select Committee on the Constitution Covid-19, above n 124; Select Committee on the Constitution The Legislative Process, above n 25.

141
See Select Committee on the Constitution Covid-19, above n 124, para 68, which states that regulations made under the PHA 1984 should expire after three months and para 82, which recommended a three-month sunset clause for all regulations made in response to a public health emergency.See also Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee Coronavirus Act 2020 Two Years On (Seventh Report of Session 2021-22, HC 978, 18 March 2022), para 27 which recommends a sunset clause in any future legislation.142 For instance, in February 2022, the Government announced that it would be keeping in force four provisions of the CVA 2020 beyond the two-year deadline: ss 30, 53, 54 and 55.See Cabinet Office 'Covid-19 Response: Living with Covid-19 (Cabinet Office, 23 February 2022) https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/covid-19-response-living-withcovid-19/covid-19-response-living-with-covid-19#legislation(last accessed 7 August 2023).143 Grez Hidalgo et al, above n 5. 144 For example, see A Tucker 'Brexit and the problem with delegated legislation' in Doyle et al, above n 58.145 The Committee's powers are set out under a temporary Standing Order of 3 February 2020 (as amended on 17 March 2021).146 The Committee's terms of reference, as amended on 13 May 2021, are set out at https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/255/secondary-legislation-scrutiny-committee/ (last accessed 7 August 2023).147 Ibid.

Table 1 .
Time spent debating superseded regulations

Table B .
Number of parliamentary debates and forum

Table C .
Single SI debate or bundle debate

Table D .
Type of SI debated