Reference

Ways and Means Motion

Ways and Means Motion

Plain meaning

A parliamentary step used to propose taxation measures before related tax legislation is introduced or advanced.

Also called

notice of ways and means motion NWMM

Key points

  • A ways and means motion is commonly used for tax measures because the House of Commons controls taxation and public finance measures.
  • A notice of ways and means motion can signal the detailed text of proposed tax amendments before a bill is introduced.
  • A motion is not the same thing as enacted law; the related bill must still pass the legislative process and receive Royal Assent.
  • Effective dates in tax proposals may be earlier than Royal Assent, depending on the measure and legislative practice.
  • For readers, the motion helps identify what the government is actually proposing, beyond a news release or budget summary.

Why it comes up

Ways and means motions are important because tax changes often move from budget announcement to motion to bill before becoming law.

News signals

budget implementation tax legislation Parliament

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