THE Prime Minister is promising to deliver seven Brexit Bills which will be unveiled in Westminster this week.
Boris Johnson is planning to announce the new laws which will "deliver on the promise of Brexit" in the Queen's Speech, the Prime Minister told the Sunday Express.
He insisted the "super seven" set of Brexit Bills would allow Britain to "thrive as a modern, dynamic and independent country" by "changing old EU rules that don't work for the UK", he told the newspaper.
Mr Johnson said: "I call them the super seven - and they will benefit families and businesses across the land by changing old EU rules that don't work for the UK.
"From data reform to gene-editing to financial services, these Bills will allow us to thrive as a modern, dynamic and independent country, and this government is getting on with the job of delivering them."
But writing on Twitter the former Irish ambassador to the EU Bobby McDonagh noted: "Johnson again talking about a “bonfire” of EU red tape. Most of that “red tape” was EU legislation, supported and significantly shaped by UK, to facilitate free trade with UK’s largest market."
The Queen's Speech, being delivered in Parliament on Tuesday, comes after the Conservatives suffered significant losses at Thursday's local elections, losing almost 500 seats and control of 11 councils as voters turned away from the Tories influenced by the partygate scandal and sleaze.
The party shed support to the Liberal Democrats in southern England, and lost key London councils to Labour.
The Tories also saw losses in Scotland, where the SNP won the most seats, and in Wales to a resurgent Labour. The PM said it had been "tough" in some areas.
The Queen's Speech will be used by Mr Johnson as an attempt to get on the front foot in his party with some Tory MPs unhappy over his performance and also show his administration is focused on people's concerns on issues including the rising cost of living.
The Prime Minister is expected to also announce the Government's plans to revive struggling town centres.
The plan to rid high streets of "derelict shopfronts" and restore neighbourhood pride, with councils given extra powers to force landlords to rent out empty shops, will form a key plan of the Queen's Speech as Mr Johnson tries to reset his Government following damaging local election results.
Other measures will include the ability to make the pavement cafes which sprang up during the Covid-19 pandemic a permanent part of the town centre landscape.
Under the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill measures to revive England's high streets, councils will be given powers to take control of buildings for the benefit of their communities.
Compulsory rental auctions will ensure that landlords make shops that have been vacant for more than a year available to prospective tenants.
Authorities will also be given greater powers to use compulsory purchase orders to deliver housing, regeneration schemes and infrastructure.
Mr Johnson said: "High streets up and down the country have long been blighted by derelict shopfronts, because they've been neglected, stripping opportunity from local areas.
"We are putting that right by placing power back in the hands of local leaders and the community so our towns can be rejuvenated, levelling up opportunity and restoring neighbourhood pride."
Officials highlighted British Retail Consortium figures showing about one in seven shops were vacant, with as many as a fifth empty in the North East.
Shops have been hit by high rental and business rate costs and declining demand as consumers have moved online, a trend exacerbated by the pandemic.
Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove said: "By empowering local communities to rent out shops which have been sat empty for a year or longer, we will end the scourge of boarded up shops that have blighted some of our great towns across the country for far too long."
The measures aimed at making a continental-style cafe culture a permanent feature of England's towns and cities will also feature in the Government's plans.
During the pandemic, restaurants, pubs and bars were granted temporary powers to serve guests on pavements.
Through new legislation, these powers will be made permanent to expand capacity for businesses in the hope of boosting local economies.
The Queen's Speech is not expected to include proposed plans to ban the import of fur and foie gras.
The Times newspaper reported the measure had been dropped after Cabinet critics warned it was "fundamentally unconservative".
The Animals Abroad Bill is expected to include a ban on the trade in hunting trophies and the sale and promotion of travel experiences which are cruel to animals.
On Saturday, UK Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi said the Queen's Speech package would "demonstrate to the nation that the second half of this Parliament is all about dealing with repairing the economy, recovering from Covid, the backlog of the NHS and national security".
Other measures expected in the package include a Brexit Freedoms Bill to make it easier to remove legacy EU laws and a Bill of Rights to replace the Human Rights Act.
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