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Instrument under section 25 of the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996 made (signed into law) Procedures with step depth

A step of type Business step.

A statutory instrument is ‘made’ when signed by the minister (or person with authority under the Act); in other words the instrument is not in draft. Made affirmative instruments laid under section 25 of the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996 allow a Minister to make and lay an instrument, but under section 77 of the same Act, the instrument will have effect only after a resolution has been passed by both Houses approving it.

There is 1 procedure.

  1. Instrument under section 25 of the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996 made (signed into law) has step depth 2 in the Made affirmative procedure

    Instruments subject to the made affirmative procedure are signed into law before being laid in Parliament but require approval from Parliament within a specified period. There are different types of made affirmative SIs: the most common type of made affirmative SI comes into force before it is approved (and can come into force before it is laid) but cannot remain in force unless it is approved by Parliament within a specified period. Another rarer type of made affirmative SI is laid after being made but cannot come into force unless the instrument is approved by Parliament. The relevant procedure and the length of the approval period is defined in the parent Act.

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