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Scottish Court Rules Boris Johnson’s Suspension of Parliament Illegal Scottish Court Rules Boris Johnson’s Suspension of Parliament Illegal
(about 3 hours later)
LONDON — A Scottish court ruled on Wednesday that Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to suspend Parliament was unlawful, a remarkable rebuke of the government’s hard-line tactics in trying to pull Britain out of the European Union.LONDON — A Scottish court ruled on Wednesday that Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to suspend Parliament was unlawful, a remarkable rebuke of the government’s hard-line tactics in trying to pull Britain out of the European Union.
A panel of three judges in the Court of Session found that the decision to send lawmakers home for five weeks at the height of the Brexit crisis was “unlawful because it had the purpose of stymying Parliament.” A panel of three judges in the Court of Session, Scotland’s highest civil court, found that the decision to send lawmakers home for five weeks at the height of the Brexit crisis was “unlawful because it had the purpose of stymying Parliament.”
The main reason for the suspension, known technically as “prorogation,” was Mr. Johnson’s desire to free himself of parliamentary oversight as he pursued an abrupt Brexit, a summary of the ruling said. The ruling suggested that Mr. Johnson had misled Queen Elizabeth II, professing to want to shutter Parliament for banal procedural reasons while in fact asking her to do so to silence recalcitrant lawmakers opposed to his Brexit plans. It was another indication to some scholars of the prime minister’s open disdain for constitutional norms and legal obligations during the chaotic early weeks of his leadership.
“This was an egregious case of a clear failure to comply with generally accepted standards of behavior of public authorities,” the summary said. “It was to be inferred that the principal reasons for the prorogation were to prevent or impede Parliament holding the executive to account and legislating with regard to Brexit, and to allow the executive to pursue a policy of a no-deal Brexit without further parliamentary interference.” It also deepened the political morass in which Mr. Johnson finds himself. In angling to extract Britain from the European Union by Oct. 31, with or without a deal, Mr. Johnson has lost his working majority in Parliament, exiled veteran Conservative lawmakers and failed twice to secure an early election. Now he is promising to defy a law designed to stop a no-deal Brexit.
The decision set up a showdown next week at the Supreme Court in London, which had already said it would review the case and take up the question of whether to halt the suspension of Parliament. At least one ex-Conservative lawmaker said on Wednesday that the prime minister should resign if he lied to the queen. A few other lawmakers vowed to stage a sit-in to reopen Parliament.
The British government said it was “disappointed” by the decision and would file an appeal, calling the suspension “legal and necessary.” The group of lawmakers who brought the case called for Parliament to be immediately reconvened. The government had said it was suspending, or “proroguing,” Parliament to prepare for the start of a new legislative session. But the Scottish court disagreed, saying there was no evidence of Mr. Johnson doing anything but trying to free himself of parliamentary oversight as he pursued an abrupt Brexit over the objection of lawmakers.
“This was an egregious case of a clear failure to comply with generally accepted standards of behavior of public authorities,” a summary of the ruling said. “It was to be inferred that the principal reasons for the prorogation were to prevent or impede Parliament holding the executive to account and legislating with regard to Brexit, and to allow the executive to pursue a policy of a no-deal Brexit without further parliamentary interference.”
But the decision did not itself reopen Parliament. Instead it set up a showdown next week at Britain’s Supreme Court, which had already said it would review the case and take up the question of whether to halt the suspension of Parliament.
In doing so, the Supreme Court will either endorse the Scottish court’s decision, eliciting a torrent of demands for the prime minister’s resignation, or reject it and side instead with the High Court in London, which said last week that the suspension was not open to a legal challenge.
The British government said it was “disappointed” by the Scottish court’s decision and would file an appeal, describing the suspension as “legal and necessary” for normal procedural reasons. The group of lawmakers who brought the case called for Parliament to be immediately reconvened.
“Our understanding is that unless the Supreme Court grants an order in the meantime, Parliament is unsuspended with immediate effect,” said Jolyon Maugham, the lawyer whose group funded the challenge.“Our understanding is that unless the Supreme Court grants an order in the meantime, Parliament is unsuspended with immediate effect,” said Jolyon Maugham, the lawyer whose group funded the challenge.
But that remained in doubt. The office of the speaker of the House of Commons said decisions about reconvening Parliament rested in the government’s hands. The office of the speaker of the House of Commons, however, said decisions about reconvening Parliament rested in the government’s hands.
The Scottish Court ruling conflicted with a separate decision by the High Court in London last week that the suspension was legal. The Scottish Court also reversed a decision of its own last week not to intervene in the case. It is within a prime minister’s rights to suspend Parliament, and the High Court in London noted that there were no legal limits on how long the chamber could be closed between sessions.
In reaching their decision, the judges reviewed documents detailing the government’s deliberations before suspending Parliament. On that basis, they said, the only explanation for the decision to suspend Parliament was the government to keep its Brexit policy from being scrutinized by lawmakers largely opposed to a no-deal Brexit. But suspensions typically last for only a few days, without major political implications. Sending lawmakers home as they sought to block the prime minister’s Brexit plans, on the other hand, has been described by scholars as constitutionally suspect, if not downright unconstitutional.
Parliamentary oversight, the summary of the ruling said, is “a central pillar of the good governance principle enshrined in the constitution.” The Scottish court said parliamentary oversight was “a central pillar of the good governance principle enshrined in the constitution.”
The ruling said that the court would make an order declaring that the prime minister’s advice to Queen Elizabeth II asking her to suspend Parliament, and the suspension of Parliament itself, was unlawful “and is thus null and of no effect.” It reversed a decision of its own last week not to intervene in the case. The summary of the ruling said judges had reviewed documents detailing the government’s deliberations before suspending Parliament. On that basis, it said, “the only inference that could be drawn was that the U.K. government and the prime minister wished to restrict Parliament.”
That created uncomfortable questions about whether Mr. Johnson had deliberately misled the queen, who acts on the advice of the prime minister. British lawmakers also passed a motion on Monday demanding the government release private messages among senior officials about suspending Parliament. The messages were due by Wednesday night, but Parliament had no way of enforcing the order while it was not in session.
Mr. Johnson, who is committed to pulling Britain out of the European Union by Oct. 31, with or without a deal governing future relations, decided to send Parliament home as lawmakers began making clear that they would try to block his path to an abrupt Brexit. While it is the prime minister’s decision to suspend Parliament, the measure is formally carried out by the queen. In this case, the court said Mr. Johnson’s advice to the queen asking her to suspend Parliament was unlawful. The court said it would make an order declaring that the advice, and the suspension itself, was “thus null and of no effect.”
While it is within a prime minister’s rights to suspend Parliament, those suspensions usually last for only a few days. Scholars called it constitutionally suspect, if not downright unconstitutional, though many doubted that the courts would intervene. It was not clear when that order would be made.
The suspension began on Tuesday, and it was scheduled to prevent Parliament from sitting until mid-October, only weeks before Britain could crash out of the European Union without a deal. Scottish law is different from the law in England and Wales, including on constitutional matters, scholars said on Wednesday, one reason why the rulings in Scotland and in London may have conflicted.
Lawmakers moved quickly enough before the suspension that they passed a law seeking to force Mr. Johnson to ask for a Brexit delay if he did not have a deal in place by late October, though Mr. Johnson has vowed that he would never ask for an extension. But the government angered Scots when some unnamed Downing Street officials hinted to British news outlets that the rulings differed because the Scottish judges were politically biased. Robert Buckland, the government’s secretary of state for justice, quickly contradicted those claims, saying “our judges are renowned around the world for their excellence and impartiality.”
The team that brought the case said it had done so in Scotland because English high courts were not sitting in August.
The parliamentary shutdown began on Tuesday in raucous scenes, with opposition lawmakers throwing themselves at the speaker’s chair to keep him from standing up and allowing the chamber to be closed.
Parliament was not scheduled to sit again until mid-October, only weeks before Britain could crash out of the European Union without a deal.
When Mr. Johnson announced the suspension two weeks ago, it seemed likely to curtail the time that lawmakers had to stop him from pursuing a no-deal Brexit, an outcome that could create food and medicine shortages. But the shutdown quickly became a liability: It united a fractious opposition and emboldened lawmakers from his own Conservative Party to defy him on major votes.
And in the end, lawmakers moved quickly enough that they passed a law seeking to force Mr. Johnson, in the absence of a new Brexit deal by late October, to ask Brussels for a delay.
Mr. Johnson, though, has vowed never to ask for an extension, suggesting that he may look for ways to skirt the law. That could draw the Supreme Court into the Brexit impasse once again, scholars said, and provoke an even more acute constitutional crisis than the one Britain already faced.