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https://scmp.com/news/world/europe/article/3030150/uk-supreme-court-rules-pm-boris-johnsons-suspension-parliament
World/ Europe

UK parliament to reconvene on Wednesday after Supreme Court rules PM Boris Johnson’s suspension of parliament ‘unlawful’

  • Parliamentary business will resume on Wednesday at 11.30am, the speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow said in response to the ruling
  • The court rejected the government’s assertions that the decision to suspend parliament until October 14 was routine and not related to Brexit
Anti-Brexit supporters gather in the rain outside the Supreme Court in London, on Tuesday. Photo: AP

In a major blow to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Britain’s highest court ruled on Tuesday that his decision to suspend parliament for five weeks in the crucial countdown to the country’s Brexit deadline was illegal, sparking calls for him to resign.

The unanimous, strongly worded Supreme Court judgment declared his order to suspend parliament “void and of no effect.” The court found that Johnson acted to limit debate by lawmakers on Britain’s impending departure from the European Union in violation of parliament’s constitutional role.

The Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, immediately announced that MPs would reconvene on Wednesday morning.

The landmark decision was quickly criticised by Johnson, who has been at odds with parliament since he took power in July with the determination to take Britain out of the EU on October 31 with or without a divorce deal.

President of Britain’s Supreme Court, Justice Lady Brenda Hale, reads out the verdict. Photo: Handout
President of Britain’s Supreme Court, Justice Lady Brenda Hale, reads out the verdict. Photo: Handout

“I strongly disagree with this decision of the Supreme Court. I have the upmost respect for our judiciary, I don’t think this was the right decision,” Johnson said in New York, where he was attending the UN General Assembly. “I think that the prorogation [suspension of parliament] has been used for centuries without this kind of challenge.”

Johnson did not rule out trying to suspend parliament again.

“As the law currently stands, the UK leaves the EU on October 31 come what may, but the exciting thing for us now is to get a good deal. And that is what we are working on,” he said. “And to be honest it is not made much easier by this kind of stuff in parliament or in the courts.”

Protesters demanded parliament be recalled outside the Supreme Court in central London on Tuesday. Photo: AFP
Protesters demanded parliament be recalled outside the Supreme Court in central London on Tuesday. Photo: AFP

House of Commons Speaker John Bercow welcomed the historic verdict and said parliament would resume its business on Wednesday morning. He said citizens are “entitled” to have parliament perform its core constitutional duties, which are to hold ministers to account and pass laws.

Bercow said that there will not be a Prime Minister Questions session in parliament on Wednesday despite the fact that lawmakers were returning.

Johnson’s office said, due to the ruling, the prime minister will fly back to London overnight, earlier than planned, arriving before parliament resumes.

The harsh tone of the court’s decision, and the unanimous vote of 11 Supreme Court judges, led many to say that Johnson cannot carry on.

Opposition Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn has called on Johnson to resign. Photo: AFP
Opposition Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn has called on Johnson to resign. Photo: AFP

“His position is untenable and he should have the guts for once to do the decent thing and resign,” Scottish National Party legislator Joanna Cherry said outside the court.

Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn told his party conference that the court decision shows Johnson’s “contempt” for democracy and rule of law. He said Johnson should resign “and become the shortest-serving prime minister there’s ever been.”

“I invite Boris Johnson, in the historic words, to consider his position,” Corbyn told the party faithful in the southern city of Brighton.

In a nation without a written constitution, the case marked a rare confrontation between the prime minister, the courts and parliament over their rights and responsibilities.

It revolved around whether Johnson acted lawfully when he advised the queen to suspend parliament for five weeks during a crucial time frame before the October 31 Brexit deadline when Britain is set to leave the European Union.

Supreme Court President Brenda Hale said the suspension “was unlawful because it had the effect of frustrating or preventing the ability of Parliament to carry out its constitutional functions without reasonable justification.”

Britain's Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow said MPs will sit on Wednesday. Photo: Reuters
Britain's Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow said MPs will sit on Wednesday. Photo: Reuters

She said the court’s decision means parliament was never legally suspended and is technically still sitting.

The court rejected the government’s assertions that the decision to suspend Parliament until October 14 was routine and not related to Brexit. Government lawyers claimed that under Britain’s unwritten constitution, it was a matter for politicians, not courts, to decide.

The government’s opponents argued that Johnson illegally shut down parliament just weeks before the country is due to leave the 28-nation bloc for the “improper purpose” of dodging lawmakers’ scrutiny of his Brexit plans. They also accused Johnson of misleading the queen, whose formal approval was needed to suspend the legislature.

The court decision on Tuesday followed three days of hearings last week and comes at a crucial time in the turbulent Brexit process.

Johnson has insisted Britain must leave the EU on October 31 no matter what, more than three years after the 2016 referendum vote for Brexit.

But a law passed by parliament earlier this month demands he ask EU leaders for a delay if he has not got a divorce deal by a Brussels summit on October 17.

He has expressed optimism that he can agree new terms by then, to replace the deal struck by his predecessor Theresa May, which was rejected by MPs.

But EU leaders are not as hopeful.

The bloc’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, said on Monday that London’s current position did not offer any “basis to find an agreement” on leaving.

Johnson met EU Council President Donald Tusk in New York on Monday, after which the latter tweeted: “No breakthrough. No breakdown. No time to lose.”

The British prime minister also held talks in New York with the French and German leaders, with further meetings with European colleagues planned on Tuesday.

Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse