Blog

Lifting the Lid: The European Union Referendum (Voter Registration) Regulations 2016

9 Jun 2016
The flag of the European Union (EU). Image licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic
Image licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic

Our Lifting the Lid series aims to open up the delegated legislation process to reveal the stories behind some recently published Statutory Instruments. This week: The European Union Referendum (Voter Registration) Regulations 2016.

Joel Blackwell, Senior Researcher, Hansard Society
,
Senior Researcher, Hansard Society

Joel Blackwell

Joel Blackwell
Senior Researcher, Hansard Society

Joel conducts the Society’s continued research into the legislative process, the effectiveness of Parliament in scrutinising and holding the executive to account and the public’s engagement with politics.

He is co-author of 'The Devil is in the Detail: Parliament and Delegated Legislation'. Prior to joining the Hansard Society in 2014, Joel was a Political Consultant for Dods Parliamentary Communications and has also worked at the Electoral Commission. He graduated from Bristol University in 2005 with a degree in Politics and Social Policy.

Get our latest research, insights and events delivered to your inbox

Subscribe to our newsletter

We will never share your data with any third-parties.

Share this and support our work

Today, both Houses of Parliament will consider the European Union Referendum (Voter Registration) Regulations 2016, an emergency Statutory Instrument (SIs) which will extend the voter registration deadline for the EU referendum. This is being introduced as a result of the technical problems suffered by the government’s data website on Tuesday night which resulted in some people unable to register before the original deadline.

These draft Regulations are subject to the affirmative procedure which means that both Houses of Parliament must actively approve them before the provisions can come into effect. On average it takes around six to seven sitting weeks for the passage of an affirmative instrument through all its parliamentary stages. However, the EU draft regulations will be subject to ‘fast-tracked’ parliamentary scrutiny and all its stages will be completed today.

Traditionally, the justifications of the use of delegated legislation have centred on the need to elaborate complex detail, the need for flexibility and adaptability, and perhaps more importantly, the capacity to act in times of emergency. While the debate on the use of SIs in recent times has tended to focus on the negative aspects of the delegated legislation system and in particular, the use of SIs by successive governments in ways that were not originally intended, the circumstances surrounding these EU regulations highlights the importance of delegated legislation and the capacity it allows for governments to meet unforeseen contingencies and crises.

There are three types of affirmative instrument, the most common of which is the draft affirmative SI. A second type, the made affirmative procedure, in which the instrument comes into effect immediately but cannot remain in force if rejected by any House of Parliament, is the best procedure for ‘fast track’ delegated legislation but can only be used if it is the specified procedure within the parent act in which the SI is made under. The power to make the European Union Referendum (Voter Registration) Regulations 2016 is taken from the EU Referendum Act 2015 which specifies that it is to be made as a draft affirmative instrument and can only come into effect once it has been approved by both houses and signed off by the relevant minister.

In the House of Commons, affirmative instruments are automatically referred to a Delegated Legislation Committee for debate. Following the debate in Committee, an approval motion is put formally to the House without debate on a separate day. In order to fast-track an SI, the government can table a motion for the instrument to be debated on the Floor of the House where the approval motion question is put immediately after the debate. As with debates held in delegated legislation committees, MPs will have 90 minutes to debate the instrument.

Unlike primary legislation, the scrutiny stages for statutory instruments in both Houses run concurrently. In the House of Lords a motion to approve an affirmative instrument can be taken in either Grand Committee or on the Floor of the House. In a similar vein to the House of Commons, if an affirmative instrument is debated on the Floor of the House, the approval motion question is put immediately after the debate.

The one key procedural change for ‘fast-tracked’ affirmative SIs is that the House of Lords will have to dispense with Standing Order 72 which provides that an approval motion cannot be moved until the Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments (JCSI) has reported on the instrument. This is a scrutiny reserve that the House of Commons does not observe. Normally the JCSI will try to report on an instrument within 12 to 16 days of it being laid.

Following today’s House of Lords debate on the instrument, shadow leader of the House of Lords, Baroness Smith of Basildon, has a debate on the ‘balance of power between the Government and Parliament’, a debate which will no doubt touch on the recommendations of the Strathclyde Review into secondary legislation and the primacy of the House of Commons. Interestingly, the Strathclyde Review proposes the creation of a new procedure that would provide the House of Commons with an opportunity to ‘think again’ in the event of disagreement with the Upper House, and ultimately override any Lords vote to reject an SI. If implemented, this new procedure could potentially complicate matters for ‘fast-tracking’ delegated legislation in the future, particularly if a fixed period of delay before the Commons can override the Lords is introduced.

Blog / Once again, there is still no alternative: the costed proposals for Restoration and Renewal of the Palace of Westminster

The Restoration and Renewal Client Board’s latest report once again confirms what Parliament has known for nearly a decade: the cheapest, quickest and safest way to restore the Palace of Westminster is for MPs and Peers to move out during the works. The “full decant” option was endorsed in 2018 and reaffirmed repeatedly since. Remaining in the building could more than double costs, extend works into the 2080s, and increase risks to safety, accessibility and security. With the Palace already deteriorating and millions spent each year on patchwork repairs, further delay would itself be an expensive course of action, one that defers decisions without offering a viable alternative.

07 Feb 2026
Read more

News / A Humble Address: How MPs confronted the Mandelson scandal - Parliament Matters podcast, Episode 130

It has been a bruising week for the Prime Minister after the House of Commons backed a Conservative “Humble Address” demanding documents on Sir Keir Starmer’s vetting of Lord Mandelson for the Washington Ambassadorship. We explain how the procedure works, what role the Intelligence and Security Committee may play in decisions on disclosure, and how legislation to strip a peerage could be introduced. Plus, the latest on the Restoration and Renewal of Parliament as yet another report lands with a new set of costings. Listen and subscribe: Apple Podcasts · Spotify · Acast · YouTube · Other apps · RSS

06 Feb 2026
Read more

News / Why MPs can’t just quit: The curious case of the Chiltern Hundreds - Parliament Matters podcast, Episode 129

Why can’t MPs simply resign, and why does leaving the House of Commons still involve a medieval-sounding detour via the Chiltern Hundreds or its less glamorous cousin the Manor of Northstead? This week we unravel the history, constitutional logic and legal fudges behind this curious workaround, with some memorable resignations from the past along the way. We also assess the Government’s legislative programme as the Session heads toward its expected May close, including the striking lack of bills published for pre-legislative scrutiny. Finally, as Parliament begins the five-yearly process of renewing consent for the UK’s armed forces, we examine why an Armed Forces Bill is required and hear from Jayne Kirkham MP on how her Ten Minute Rule Bill helped extend the new Armed Forces Commissioner’s oversight to the Royal Fleet Auxiliary. Listen and subscribe: Apple Podcasts · Spotify · Acast · YouTube · Other apps · RSS

01 Feb 2026
Read more

News / Assisted dying bill: How could the Parliament Act be used? - Parliament Matters podcast, Episode 128

As the assisted dying bill grinds through the House of Lords under the weight of more than a thousand amendments, Lord Falconer has signalled that time is running out. With the Bill unlikely to complete its Lords stages this Session, he has openly raised the possibility of using the Parliament Act to override the upper House in the next Session. In this episode we explore what that would mean, how it could work in practice, and the political choices now facing ministers and Parliament. Listen and subscribe: Apple Podcasts · Spotify · Acast · YouTube · Other apps · RSS

30 Jan 2026
Read more

News / Who really sets MPs’ pay – And why you might be wrong about it. A conversation with Richard Lloyd, chair of IPSA - Parliament Matters podcast, Episode 126

What are MPs actually paid and what does the public fund to help them do their job? In this conversation with Richard Lloyd, chair of the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA) we explore the delicate balance between supporting MPs to do their jobs effectively and enforcing strict standards on the use of public money. We discuss how IPSA has shifted from a rule-heavy “traffic cop” to a principles-based regulator, why compliance is now very high, and the security risks and pressures facing MPs‘ offices as workloads rise and abuse becomes more common. Listen and subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | ACAST | YouTube | Other apps | RSS

21 Jan 2026
Read more