Following the defeat of the
Shops Bill 1986, which would have enabled widespread Sunday trading, compromise legislation was introduced in July 1994 in
England and Wales, coming into force on 26 August 1994, However, the right for workers in Scotland to refuse to work on a Sunday was later conferred by the
Sunday Working (Scotland) Act 2003.
Northern Ireland has separate laws governing Sunday opening. The Sunday Trading Bill had met with considerable opposition from the
Lord's Day Observance Society and other groups such as the
Keep Sunday Special campaign, a coalition body which includes the shopworkers'
trade union USDAW. USDAW finally agreed to support six-hour Sunday trading in return for a promise that Sunday working would be strictly voluntary. This decision played an important role in encouraging many Labour MPs to back the bill in a free vote. They asked for a guarantee of premium pay, but the Government's position was that that was a matter for negotiation between shopworkers or their unions and their employers and the Act says nothing about the rate of pay for Sunday working. ==2012 suspension==