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Motion to stop the instrument being law not called

House of Lords

A step of type Business step.

A statutory instrument laid under the made affirmative procedure becomes law on the day the Minister signs it and automatically remains law unless a motion to reject it is agreed by the House of Lords within the approval period. A motion not having been called is when the motion is on the Order Paper for that day but did not occur. It may or may not be called on a future date.

Librarian notes

Scope note: A motion not being called will usually mean it is on the Order Paper to be debated or moved (either alone or en bloc with similar motions) but for whatever reason the motion has not been called at all. We notice it by its omission, a comparison of what is due to happen on the Order Paper and what did happen in the Lords Minutes of Proceedings.

Link note: No link

Date note: Date the motion was due to be called in the House of Lords chamber

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