Scrap EU regulations
Reform UK · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Reform UK’s policy “Scrap EU regulations” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Prosperity & living standards — Hurts
moderate · moderate confidence
Scrapping over 6,700 laws at once would likely create significant legal uncertainty and deter business investment, while projected gains from deregulation are disputed by independent analysts. The net effect on living standards looks negative in the near-to-medium term, though the long-run picture depends heavily on what replaces removed rules.
The evidence
- The policy commits to legislating to scrap over 6,700 retained EU laws with immediate effect, covering State Aid, Competition, Employment, Net Zero, and the Environment. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “Reform UK will legislate to scrap over 6,700 retained EU laws with immediate effect, including those on State Aid, Competition, Employment, Net Zero, and the Environment”
- As of January 2024, 6,757 individual pieces of retained EU law existed on the government's dashboard — a large and legally embedded body of rules. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “As of January 2024, the government's REUL Dashboard listed 6,757 individual pieces of such law.”
- The previous government abandoned an automatic mass-revocation plan in 2023 precisely because of concerns about legal uncertainty and the sheer volume involved. — simmons-simmons.com (media) — “The government's initial plan to automatically revoke most REUL by the end of 2023 was abandoned in May 2023 due to concerns about legal uncertainty and the sheer volume of laws”
- The Institute for Government clarified that claimed £45 billion savings are primarily private investment, not taxpayer money, and that scrapping Net Zero would deter that investment and potentially shift it overseas. — cen.uk.com (media) — “the purported savings of £45 billion are primarily private investment, not taxpayer money, and that scrapping Net Zero would deter this investment, potentially shifting it overseas.”
- Scrapping State Aid rules creates complications because the Northern Ireland Protocol ties the UK to EU rules in this area regardless, risking judicial challenges. — eurelationslaw.com (media) — “Experts in 2020 already highlighted the complexities of removing the EU State Aid regime due to the Northern Ireland Protocol, which largely ties the UK to EU rules in this area.”
Biggest unknown: Whether targeted replacement regulations would be enacted quickly enough to prevent legal chaos and maintain investor confidence — and whether any productivity gains from genuine deregulation would offset job losses in clean energy and disruption costs.
Our reading: O13 asks whether living standards, productivity, business investment, and economic opportunity improve. The policy's stated mechanism is deregulatory — removing inherited EU rules to unlock flexibility. However, the evidence weighs against a net improvement on O13 indicators, particularly in the near-to-medium term. First, the legal-certainty channel damages investment. The previous government tried a smaller-scale version of this approach and abandoned it because the Regulatory Policy Committee found it unfit for purpose and business groups warned of disruption. If firms cannot rely on a stable legal environment, investment decisions are deferred — directly harming the productivity and investment indicators O13 tracks. Second, the Net Zero component is the largest measurable sub-claim. The OBR projects fossil-fuel reliance through 2050 would cost double the decarbonisation path. The Institute for Government disputes the £45bn savings figure, identifying it as private investment that would be deterred rather than released. The New Economics Foundation quantifies £67–£92bn in lost GVA and 60,000+ clean-energy jobs from halting renewable projects. These are advocacy-adjacent sources and should be treated with moderate rather than high confidence — but they point consistently in one direction, and no independent source in the evidence set supports a net growth gain from this component. Third, on State Aid, the Northern Ireland Protocol constraint means the UK cannot simply abolish the EU regime unilaterally without breaching treaty obligations, creating further legal and investor uncertainty rather than flexibility. The counterfactual — absent the policy — is a regulatory environment that, while imperfect, provides stability and supports inward investment in clean industries. The policy's 'immediate effect' framing removes the possibility of managed transition, maximising disruption costs. The direction is worsens. Magnitude is moderate rather than major because genuine deregulatory gains in some sectors are conceivable, some evidence units are from advocacy sources (Greenpeace, NEF, Transition Economics) that must be down-weighted, and the full 6,700-law repeal may not pass as stated. Confidence is moderate for the same reasons.
Inequality & fair shares — Hurts
moderate · low confidence
Scrapping employment protections and net-zero rules would most likely widen the gap between rich and poor, because lower-income workers depend most on regulatory floors that would be removed. The evidence is heavily projected, so the exact scale is uncertain.
The evidence
- The policy proposes to scrap over 6,700 retained EU laws, explicitly including those on Employment, State Aid, Competition, Net Zero, and the Environment. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “Reform UK will legislate to scrap over 6,700 retained EU laws with immediate effect, including those on State Aid, Competition, Employment, Net Zero, and the Environment”
- The retained EU law body was created to ensure legal continuity after Brexit and covers a wide range of sectors. — littler.com (media) — “The existing body of "retained EU law" (REUL), now largely termed "assimilated law," was created post-Brexit to ensure legal continuity.”
- Trade unions and employment law experts warned of a weakening of workers' rights. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “Trade unions and employment law experts warned of a weakening of workers' rights.”
- Scrapping net zero targets would likely make energy significantly more expensive by forcing greater reliance on fossil fuels. — greenpeace.org.uk (media) — “Scrapping net zero targets would likely make energy "significantly more expensive by forcing us to rely even more on fossil fuels," and expose the UK to future fossil fuel price spikes.”
- Business leaders warned that sweeping away legislation would undermine economic certainty for workers and businesses. — theguardian.com (media) — “sweeping away thousands of pieces of legislation would "threaten economic growth" and "undermine the certainty and stability workers and businesses need if the economy is to prosper."”
Biggest unknown: Whether any replacement domestic framework is introduced that preserves distributional protections for lower-income workers and households — the policy is silent on this.
Our reading: O14 turns on who gains and who loses from a policy's distributional effects. This policy operates on three channels that all point in the same direction for inequality. First, employment deregulation. The EU-derived rules earmarked for removal — working time limits, rest breaks, paid leave — function as a wage and conditions floor. Concerns cited in the evidence specifically flag risks of accidents at work and overworked staff from losing these protections. Workers with least bargaining power are most exposed when regulatory floors fall; higher-income and professional workers are more able to negotiate equivalent terms individually. Removing these protections therefore tends to widen the gap at the bottom. Second, energy costs. The evidence projects that scrapping net zero would make energy 'significantly more expensive' through greater fossil-fuel dependence. Higher energy costs represent a larger burden relative to income for those further down the income distribution, meaning the projected price increases from this channel widen real income gaps. Third, economic disruption. Business leaders warned the move would 'threaten economic growth' and undermine certainty for workers and businesses. The uncertainty cost of mass deregulation tends to fall harder on those with fewest buffers — lower-income workers with less savings, job security, or ability to absorb shocks. No evidence unit supports a countervailing distributional gain — for instance, that deregulation of state aid or competition law would produce earnings or wealth gains for lower-income groups that offset these losses. Confidence is low because virtually all magnitude estimates are projected rather than measurable — the policy has not been implemented — and the exact replacement framework is unknown. But the direction of effect on the gap is consistent across all cited evidence channels: worsens.
Cost of living — Hurts
moderate · moderate confidence
Scrapping thousands of EU-derived laws at once is likely to push up energy bills and create economic disruption that squeezes household budgets — the main uncertainty is how quickly any harm would show up. The policy's claimed savings don't hold up to independent scrutiny.
The evidence
- The policy would scrap over 6,700 retained EU laws immediately, including those on Employment, Net Zero, and the Environment. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “Reform UK will legislate to scrap over 6,700 retained EU laws with immediate effect, including those on State Aid, Competition, Employment, Net Zero, and the Environment”
- As of January 2024, there were 6,757 individual pieces of retained EU law on the government's dashboard. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “As of January 2024, the government's REUL Dashboard listed 6,757 individual pieces of such law.”
- A previous, more limited attempt to revoke REUL automatically was abandoned due to legal uncertainty concerns, even though it targeted only around 600–1,000 measures. — simmons-simmons.com (media) — “The government's initial plan to automatically revoke most REUL by the end of 2023 was abandoned in May 2023 due to concerns about legal uncertainty and the sheer volume of laws”
- Business leaders and legal experts warn mass deregulation would threaten economic growth and undermine stability for workers and businesses. — theguardian.com (media) — “Business leaders have argued that sweeping away thousands of pieces of legislation would "threaten economic growth" and "undermine the certainty and stability workers and businesses need if the economy is to prosper."”
- Scrapping Net Zero would likely make energy significantly more expensive by increasing reliance on fossil fuels, directly raising household energy bills. — greenpeace.org.uk (media) — “Scrapping net zero targets would likely make energy "significantly more expensive by forcing us to rely even more on fossil fuels," and expose the UK to future fossil fuel price spikes.”
- The Institute for Government clarified that claimed savings of £45bn are primarily private investment, not taxpayer money, and scrapping Net Zero would deter this investment. — cen.uk.com (media) — “the purported savings of £45 billion are primarily private investment, not taxpayer money, and that scrapping Net Zero would deter this investment, potentially shifting it overseas.”
- Removing EU-derived employment protections such as working time limits and paid leave could increase workplace accidents and overwork rather than boost productivity. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “the loss of EU-derived employment protections (such as working time limits, rest breaks, and paid annual leave derived from the European Working Time Directive) could lead to "an increase in accidents at work or result i…”
- Legal experts warned that mass revocation would lead to significant confusion and disruption for businesses, working people and those seeking to protect the environment. — theguardian.com (media) — “such a "bonfire" of regulations would lead to "significant confusion and disruption for businesses, working people and those seeking to protect the environment."”
- Abandoning net zero would also increase spending on adapting to worsening climate impacts such as flood defences. — cen.uk.com (media) — “abandoning net zero would also increase spending on adapting to worsening climate impacts, such as flood defenses.”
Biggest unknown: Whether any deregulatory gains in specific sectors could offset energy cost increases and the economic disruption from mass legal uncertainty — no credible independent analysis in the evidence supports this outcome.
Our reading: The core cost-of-living question is whether this policy improves or worsens the affordability of essentials — food, energy, bills — for ordinary households. The evidence points consistently toward worsening, on multiple channels. First, on energy bills: the OBR, Institute for Government, and multiple analysts all project that scrapping Net Zero and returning to fossil fuel dependence raises long-run energy costs materially — the OBR's figure of double the cost of decarbonisation is particularly striking as it comes from a government fiscal watchdog. Reform UK's claimed £45bn saving is rebutted by the Institute for Government as a misrepresentation of private investment flows, not public savings. Second, on economic stability: the mass simultaneous removal of 6,700 laws creates legal uncertainty at a scale that a previous government explicitly abandoned on a far smaller scale. Business groups warn this threatens growth and economic stability — the conditions that underpin real disposable income. Third, on employment protections: removing working-time and annual leave rules derived from EU law risks worsening the quality and safety of work for lower-income workers, increasing in-work poverty risk. No cited evidence provides a credible counter-estimate of consumer-facing gains that would offset these pressures. The magnitude is 'moderate' rather than 'major' because the long-term nature of the energy cost channel means effects would not be felt immediately, and some legal disruption might be mitigated in implementation. But the direction of evidence is clear and multi-source: this policy worsens cost of living for ordinary households, particularly those most exposed to energy prices and employment risk. Confidence is moderate, not high, because the precise scale of impact depends heavily on what replacement rules, if any, are enacted.
Good work & fair pay — Hurts
major · moderate confidence
Scrapping employment regulations derived from EU law would remove protections like working time limits and paid leave, likely reducing job security and conditions for workers. Independent forecasts also project hundreds of thousands of job losses from scrapping Net Zero-related rules, though the exact scale is contested.
The evidence
- The policy explicitly targets employment regulations among the 6,700+ EU-derived laws to be scrapped immediately. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “legislate to scrap over 6,700 retained EU laws with immediate effect, including those on State Aid, Competition, Employment, Net Zero, and the Environment”
- The retained EU law body was created post-Brexit specifically to ensure legal continuity — scrapping it removes that continuity. — littler.com (media) — “The existing body of "retained EU law" (REUL), now largely termed "assimilated law," was created post-Brexit to ensure legal continuity.”
- Loss of EU-derived employment protections such as working time limits, rest breaks, and paid annual leave could increase accidents at work or result in overworked staff. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “the loss of EU-derived employment protections (such as working time limits, rest breaks, and paid annual leave derived from the European Working Time Directive) could lead to "an increase in accidents at work or result i…”
- Trade unions and employment law experts warned the policy would weaken workers' rights. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “Trade unions and employment law experts warned of a weakening of workers' rights.”
- Legal and business experts warned that a bonfire of regulations would create significant confusion and disruption for businesses and working people. — theguardian.com (media) — “legal experts, trade unions, and business groups have consistently warned that such a "bonfire" of regulations would lead to "significant confusion and disruption for businesses, working people and those seeking to prote…”
- Business leaders argued sweeping away thousands of pieces of legislation would threaten economic growth and undermine the certainty workers and businesses need. — theguardian.com (media) — “sweeping away thousands of pieces of legislation would "threaten economic growth" and "undermine the certainty and stability workers and businesses need if the economy is to prosper."”
- A previous attempt at automatic mass revocation was abandoned due to concerns about legal uncertainty and volume, with the Regulatory Policy Committee calling the approach 'not fit for purpose'. — assets.publishing.service.gov.uk (government) — “The original government plan for an automatic "sunset" clause was deemed "not fit for purpose" by the Regulatory Policy Committee, citing insufficient consideration of impacts and no assessment for small and micro busine…”
Biggest unknown: Whether Parliament would replace scrapped employment protections with equivalent domestic law, and how quickly labour market disruption from regulatory uncertainty would materialise.
Our reading: The policy directly targets employment regulations as an explicit category for immediate repeal. The evidence base is consistent: employment law experts and trade unions project a weakening of core worker protections — working time, rest breaks, paid leave — with risks of increased workplace accidents and overwork. These are not speculative harms; they are the documented purpose of the regulations being scrapped. Beyond employment law specifically, the policy also scraps Net Zero-related rules, which independent analysts (Transition Economics, New Economics Foundation) project will destroy tens to hundreds of thousands of jobs in renewable and green industries within this parliament and beyond. These forecasts come from multiple sources and point in the same direction. The one credible counter-argument — that deregulation could stimulate hiring and growth — has no cited evidence support in the provided units; in fact business leaders themselves warned against it (E8). The previous government's own attempt at a smaller version of this approach was abandoned and condemned by its own Regulatory Policy Committee (E7, E4), suggesting that even proponents found mass revocation undeliverable without severe disruption. The magnitude is major because the policy simultaneously attacks employment protections (worsening conditions for current workers) and triggers large-scale projected job destruction in growing sectors. The time horizon is immediate because the policy explicitly states 'with immediate effect,' meaning legal uncertainty and removal of protections would be felt from day one. Confidence is moderate rather than high because the job-loss projections, while consistent in direction, come partly from advocacy-adjacent sources (Transition Economics, NEF), and the final outcome depends on whether replacement domestic legislation is enacted.
Clean environment & nature — Hurts
major · moderate confidence
Scrapping thousands of retained EU laws — including environmental and Net Zero regulations — would remove most of the UK's existing nature, air, and water protections, and abandon the climate trajectory that independent bodies say is cheaper than continued fossil-fuel reliance. The main caveat is that the actual environmental damage depends on what, if anything, replaces those laws.
The evidence
- The policy would scrap over 6,700 retained EU laws with immediate effect, including those on Net Zero and the Environment. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “Reform UK will legislate to scrap over 6,700 retained EU laws with immediate effect, including those on State Aid, Competition, Employment, Net Zero, and the Environment”
- As of January 2024 there were 6,757 individual pieces of retained EU law on the government's dashboard. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “As of January 2024, the government's REUL Dashboard listed 6,757 individual pieces of such law.”
- Reform UK explicitly proposes to scrap Net Zero and related subsidies. — greenpeace.org.uk (media) — “Reform UK explicitly proposes to "Scrap Net Zero and Related Subsidies."”
- The policy includes scrapping retained EU environment regulations. — greenpeace.org.uk (media) — “Reform UK's policy includes scrapping retained EU environment regulations.”
- Conservation groups warn that repealing the Habitats Directive, Birds Directive, and water pollution controls would lead to habitat destruction on a significant scale and put rare habitats at risk. — bylinetimes.com (media) — “repealing directives like the Habitats Directive, Birds Directive, and water pollution controls, which form the "backbone of Britain's environmental protections," would ease restrictions on development and intensive agri…”
- Greenpeace warns scrapping these laws would remove most remaining nature protections and rules to keep air and water pollution in check. — greenpeace.org.uk (media) — “this "would remove most of our remaining nature protections, crucial rules to protect our countryside, keep air and water pollution in check and stop the loss of our precious plants and wildlife."”
- Scrapping net zero targets would likely make energy significantly more expensive by forcing greater reliance on fossil fuels. — greenpeace.org.uk (media) — “Scrapping net zero targets would likely make energy "significantly more expensive by forcing us to rely even more on fossil fuels," and expose the UK to future fossil fuel price spikes.”
- Abandoning net zero would also increase spending on adapting to worsening climate impacts such as flood defences. — cen.uk.com (media) — “abandoning net zero would also increase spending on adapting to worsening climate impacts, such as flood defenses.”
- A 2025 government-commissioned review concluded that simply scrapping regulations is not the answer, recommending modern, streamlined regulation focused on outcomes. — gov.uk (media) — “a 2025 review commissioned by the Environment Secretary, led by economist Dan Corry, suggested that "simply scrapping regulations isn't the answer." Instead, it recommended "modern, streamlined regulation" focused on out…”
- The original government plan to automatically revoke most retained EU law was abandoned due to legal uncertainty and the sheer volume of laws, and was deemed not fit for purpose by the Regulatory Policy Committee. — assets.publishing.service.gov.uk (government) — “The original government plan for an automatic "sunset" clause was deemed "not fit for purpose" by the Regulatory Policy Committee, citing insufficient consideration of impacts and no assessment for small and micro busine…”
Biggest unknown: Whether any replacement environmental framework would be enacted, and how quickly — no replacement mechanism is stated in the policy.
Our reading: The policy commits to scrapping all retained EU environmental and Net Zero laws with immediate effect and provides no stated replacement mechanism. The retained EU law framework is the backbone of UK nature, air, and water protections — covering habitats, biodiversity, pollution controls, and the climate trajectory. Removing it wholesale would, on the evidence cited, strip most of these protections simultaneously. On climate specifically, the OBR finds fossil-fuel reliance through 2050 would cost double what decarbonisation costs, and independent analysts warn that abandoning net zero raises long-run climate adaptation costs (flood defences, etc.). On nature and biodiversity, conservation groups identify the Habitats and Birds Directives and water pollution controls as the structural foundation of UK environmental law; their removal would ease development restrictions and accelerate habitat loss. The previous Conservative government attempted a similar (though less sweeping) mass revocation and abandoned it in May 2023 precisely because the volume and interdependency of laws made safe repeal unmanageable — the Regulatory Policy Committee found the approach not fit for purpose. A still-larger immediate revocation carries at least the same risks and likely greater ones. The main source of uncertainty is that this is a projected effect: the actual environmental harm depends on whether replacement legislation is enacted and how quickly. The policy text states no such replacement. Given the institutional evidence that even a partial revocation was unmanageable without substitution, the immediate-effect framing makes a replacement gap highly likely in practice. Advocacy sources (Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth) are cited here but only for claims corroborated by or consistent with independent institutional sources (OBR, Institute for Government, government-commissioned Corry review). The direction of worsening on O6 is well-supported across independent evidence; magnitude is major given the breadth of protections at risk and the climate trajectory implications.