
The Tobacco and Vapes Bill risks unravelling Windsor Framework
As a former Solicitor General and Chair of the Northern Ireland Affairs Select Committee, I am no stranger to the legal complexities that arise when Westminster legislation intersects with our post-Brexit arrangements in Northern Ireland. Yet even by those standards, the Tobacco and Vapes Bill now before Parliament represents an extraordinary and avoidable collision course with the law.
Ministers have sheepishly suggested that the Bill does not affect trade between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK. That is a surprising conclusion, and, in my view, a legally indefensible one. As someone who helped oversee the legal machinery of government, I can say this plainly: legislation that purports to apply across the UK but cannot lawfully operate in Northern Ireland is both constitutionally and legally incoherent.
The problem is relatively straightforward. Under the Windsor Framework, Northern Ireland continues to follow key parts of EU law to maintain access to the EU Single Market for goods. One such law is the 2014 EU Tobacco Products Directive, which mandates that tobacco can be legally sold to adults aged 18 and over. The UK Bill proposes a generational ban, effectively criminalising the sale of tobacco to anyone born after 2008. The contradiction is obvious.
If the Bill applies UK-wide, Northern Ireland will be out of step with EU law. If the Bill is not enforceable in Northern Ireland, then the UK's internal market will be fragmented. Either outcome exposes the UK to legal challenge and breaches the treaty obligations we signed only last year.
The Windsor Framework is not merely political scaffolding; it is now part of an international treaty that carries direct effect in UK law. As I saw time and again during my tenure as Chair of the Northern Ireland Affairs Select Committee, the unique legal position of Northern Ireland requires careful and nuanced handling. Blunt instruments like this Bill risk unravelling the hard-won gains of recent years.
The legal risk is not hypothetical. The courts in Northern Ireland – in cases such as Dillon v Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, have confirmed their power to dis-apply UK legislation that contravenes the Framework. The relevant test, long established, would be easily met here. The right to purchase legal goods, like tobacco, is an economic right protected under the Framework and the Good Friday Agreement. To remove that right in Northern Ireland, by domestic legislation that conflicts with EU law, would be a direct breach of both. It is simply inconceivable that such a law could stand in Northern Ireland without falling foul of the courts.
I say this not as a political opponent of the Bill's objectives, (I actually voted in favour of the Bill in principle under the last government) but as a KC who has spent years navigating the legal thickets of post-Brexit Britain. The law matters. International obligations matter. Our constitutional order depends on Parliament respecting both. I have been greatly disappointed by the level of forensic legal rigour applied to the Bill that is required for it to get muscular enough to be considered remotely workable.
The choice now before Parliament is not whether to press ahead with the generational ban.
It is whether to press ahead lawfully. That cannot be done until the UK secures agreement through the UK–EU Joint Committee or expressly exempts Northern Ireland from the scope of the Bill.
Until then, the Government must pause this legislation. Anything less risks breaching international law, undermining the internal market, and inviting yet another avoidable constitutional crisis.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
9 minutes ago
- BBC News
Revised £7.5m Leicester Market revamp plans submitted
Plans to transform the historic Leicester Market into a joint events and retail space have been City Council has put forward the first of two applications for approval, which details seating, planting, lighting and security measures for the city centre second application, which is expected in the coming months, will set out the details for a new covered market authority submitted new proposals for a shared space after a backlash from traders over fears they would not be allowed to return to the 700-year-old marketplace. Last year, work on the planned £7.5m revamp, which was announced in 2022, was paused following demolition council said at the time the area opened up by the work could instead be used as a space for a consultation to return the market to its original location and create a new event space received "overwhelming" latest plans will see a smaller 48-stall market built adjacent to the existing food shutters would secure the market when it was not in use and it could be fully dismantled if the entire site was being used for an the council said the new covered market stalls would likely be for food vendors only, meaning other traders may need to find a new location. According to planning documents, the authority hopes to use the square to create an "open and heritage-focused public realm at the heart of the city".The scheme will see views of the historic Corn Exchange building opened up, with new planting and lighting aimed at "enhancing" and focusing on heritage features."Bespoke perch seating" will also be installed throughout the site, documents security measures will be introduced, including retractable bollards to be installed at the edge of the market square. The documents state: "Leicester's covered market has long been a defining feature of the city's civic and commercial life. "Located at the heart of the historic Market Place, it has for centuries served as a hub for trade, social gathering, and local commerce."However, in recent decades, the market has faced increasing challenges. "Trading conditions and the overall visitor experience declined, falling short of expectations for a modern, accessible city centre destination."The application said added: "The aim for the site is to create a more inclusive, resilient, and engaging city centre space, where heritage, community events, and public life can be enjoyed."A public consultation on the plans will run until 29 July, with a decision due to be made on 25 regeneration of the market is expected to be completed by the end of 2026.


The Independent
15 minutes ago
- The Independent
Supermarkets told to play a bigger role in NHS fight against obesity
New government plans propose fining supermarkets and takeaways that fail to sell healthier food, as part of a 10-year NHS strategy to tackle the obesity epidemic. Under the policy, large businesses will be required to report their sales of healthy food, with targets set to increase these sales and financial penalties used as a last resort for non-compliance. Health secretary Wes Streeting warned that unless the rising costs and demand caused by obesity are curbed, the NHS risks becoming unsustainable. The initiative allows retailers flexibility to meet targets through methods like tweaking recipes, offering discounts on healthy items, or redesigning store layouts. The UK has the third highest adult obesity rate in Europe, costing the NHS £11.4 billion annually, though some critics, like Tory shadow paymaster general Richard Holden, dismiss the plans as 'nanny state nonsense'.


BBC News
19 minutes ago
- BBC News
South Ribble homes to be built on former factory site
A major housing development first mooted more than 15 years ago is finally set to get off the drawing than 270 homes will be built across the Penwortham Mills site near Preston, which was previously occupied by a factory belonging to the surgical lint manufacturer Vernon plot – part of which became home to a new Lidl store in February – has been eyed for a residential estate since the late 2000s, shortly after the firm proposals have been approved since then, but none has ever come to fruition, with the land having also changed hands on numerous occasions. In April, the site was acquired by the construction firm Persimmon Homes, which told a meeting of South Ribble Borough Council's planning committee it was eager to bring the blueprint to needed approval to tweak the design of the properties being built, to replace those approved under the most recent permission granted in 2022 to what was then the Trafford Housing Trust, later to become part of the L&Q Graham, senior land and planning manager for Persimmon in Lancashire, said the revised range for the first phase of the "stalled" estate reflected "the already approved arrangement as closely as possible".The council's planning manager, Catherine Thomas, told members there was "hardly any difference at all" in the overall shape of the initial phase. 'Affordable homes' The changes – which were approved without debate – relate to 49 of the homes within the first tranche of the development, for which full planning permission has already been will be made up of detached, semi-detached and terrace styles – and work on them is now expected to begin in the coming months.A similar revision will later be submitted for the remaining 68 properties within that second and third phases only have outline permission currently granted for them. This means applications for the details of house designs would have been required in future regardless of the change of ownership of the site – and Persimmon says they will come forward in due the firm is planning to build only 274 dwellings in all on Penwortham Mills – fewer than the up to 301 proposed in the application by Trafford Housing homes are already approved for a neighbouring site where the Sumpter Horse pub stood until its demolition in the Penwortham Mills plot, the Local Democracy Reporting Service understands 83 of the properties will be discounted "affordable homes". Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on BBC Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.