Rule of Law (Enforcement by Public Authorities) Bill Introduced in UK Parliament
A bill before the UK Parliament would require public authorities to exercise their statutory powers to investigate and take enforcement action for breaches of the law, and would make provision for sanctions against autho.
At a glance
- The Rule of Law (Enforcement by Public Authorities) Bill was listed by the UK Parliament on June 25, 2026.
- Per its long title, the bill would compel public authorities to use their statutory enforcement powers and provides for sanctions for failing to do so.
VERDICT — CONFIRMED
A Rule of Law (Enforcement by Public Authorities) Bill was listed by the UK Parliament on June 25, 2026, per Parliament's bills service.
Per the bill's long title, the measure would require public authorities to exercise their statutory powers to investigate and take enforcement action for breaches of the law, and would make provision for sanctions against authorities that fail to act.
What is confirmed is the listing and the long title's description of the bill's scope. The feed carried no detail of the sponsor, the chamber of introduction or the bill's type — a distinction that matters, since private members' bills rarely progress without government support.
Background
In the Westminster system, a bill's long title defines the outer boundary of what it may do; amendments outside it are out of order. Listing on Parliament's bills service records a bill's formal introduction — its first reading — which occurs without debate. Substantive scrutiny begins only at second reading, followed by committee and report stages and passage through the second chamber before royal assent.
The bill's stated target — public authorities that decline to use enforcement powers Parliament has given them — touches a recurring theme in UK administrative law. Enforcement discretion is the norm: regulators, councils and agencies generally choose how to deploy finite resources, and courts have historically been reluctant to compel enforcement except where a refusal is irrational or amounts to abandoning a statutory duty. A statutory obligation to act, backed by sanctions on the authorities themselves, would cut against that settled pattern — one reason the bill's type and sponsorship matter to its prospects.
The great majority of bills introduced each session, particularly those without government backing, lapse without becoming law when the session ends.
What comes next
The bill's next procedural step would be a reading in its originating chamber; no date for that stage was carried in the material. Watch the bills service entry for the sponsor, bill type and any scheduled second reading — the details that would indicate whether the measure has a realistic legislative path or stands as a statement of position.
Key facts on file
- The Rule of Law (Enforcement by Public Authorities) Bill was listed by the UK Parliament on June 25, 2026.
- Per its long title, the bill would compel public authorities to use their statutory enforcement powers and provides for sanctions for failing to do so.

