The Asian Age

UK court to rule on Parliament’s suspension today

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London, Sept. 23: The Supreme Court will decide on Tuesday on whether British Prime Minister Boris Johnson acted unlawfully in shutting down Parliament in the runup to the country’s scheduled EU exit next month.

Britain’s highest court will rule on the legality of Mr Johnson’s advice to Queen Elizabeth II to prorogue parliament for five weeks until October 14 — just a fortnight before Brexit day on October 31.

After three days of hearings last week, a spokeswoma­n said the decision would be made at 10.30 am (0930 GMT), with seven of the 11 judges who were involved in the case set to attend.

Mr Johnson, who took office in July, insists the decision to suspend Parliament earlier this month was a routine move allowing his new government to launch a fresh legislativ­e programme.

But critics accused him of trying to silence MPs, most of whom oppose his threat to leave the European Union on October 31 without a divorce deal with Brussels.

A ruling in Mr Johnson’s favour would uphold the long-held principle that prorogatio­n is solely a decision for the Prime Minister, not the courts.

But many fear that, in a country without a formal written Constituti­on, it would establish a precedent that premiers could suspend parliament for long periods.

If Mr Johnson loses, it is likely to prompt demands for Parliament to be immediatel­y recalled.

Supreme Court president Brenda Hale last week stressed that the verdict would not determine when and on what terms Britain leaves the European Union.

 ?? — AP ?? An anti-Brexit campaigner holds banners outside the entrance to the Labour Party conference at the Brighton Centre on Monday.
— AP An anti-Brexit campaigner holds banners outside the entrance to the Labour Party conference at the Brighton Centre on Monday.

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