UK Prime Minister
Boris Johnson has pledged to "further unleash the benefits of Brexit", vowing to reduce £1 billion ($1.3 billion) worth of red tape for British businesses.
The statement comes as Monday marks the second anniversary of Britain officially leaving the EU.
He added that the country has made "huge strides since then to capitalise on" its "newfound freedoms and restore the UK's status as a sovereign, independent country that can determine its own future".
Attorney General Suella Braverman, for her part, stressed that creating a mechanism to grapple with retained EU laws was "essential", something that "underpins" Britain's "ability to grasp important opportunities provided by Brexit".
She said that it means Britain "can move away from outdated EU laws that were the result of unsatisfactory compromises within the EU, some of which the UK voted and lobbied against - but was required to adopt without question".
Labour Shadow Attorney General Emily Thornberry was not that optimistic, noting that "for all this talk from the government about the potential legislative freedom we have outside the EU, they still refuse to make a concrete change the Labour Party has been demanding in this area for months, which is the removal of VAT [value added tax] on people's energy bills".
During the 2016 EU referendum campaign, Johnson's Vote Leave campaign praised a cut to VAT on energy bills as one of the potential benefits of Brexit. Earlier in January, however, Tory MPs voted against a Labour motion to slash VAT on household energy bills.
The PM's Monday statement comes as the government is set to bring forward the so-called Brexit Freedoms Bill, which aims to make it easier for Downing Street to amend or remove laws retained from Britain's 47-year EU membership.
Aside from cutting £1 billion in red tape for British businesses, the legislation will also help "ease regulatory burdens and contribute to the government's mission to unite and level up the country", according to a Downing Street press release.
This is expected to build on the work of
former Cabinet Minister Lord David Frost, who said in November 2021, that the government has not "successfully rolled back the frontiers of the European Union from Britain with Brexit, only to import that European model after all this time". Frost resigned in December 2021 over what he described as "concerns about the current direction of travel" of Johnson's government.