The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Parties seek Brexit

Cross party group want legal ruling on whether withdrawal process can be halted

- Hilary duncanson

A cross-party group of politician­s has gone to a Scottish court in a bid to seek a European legal ruling on whether the UK Parliament can unilateral­ly halt the Brexit process if the final deal is deemed unacceptab­le.

Elected representa­tives from four parties – Green MSPS Andy Wightman and Ross Greer, Joanna Cherry QC MP and MEP Alyn Smith of the SNP, Labour MEPS David Martin and Catherine Stihler and Liberal Democrat MP Christine Jardine – are named as the “petitioner­s” launching the case.

They ultimately want the European Court of Justice to determine whether the Article 50 withdrawal process can be revoked by the UK on its own, without first securing the consent of the other 27 EU member states – if the public or Members of Parliament decide the Brexit deal is not acceptable.

The group’s legal representa­tives went to the Court of Session in Edinburgh yesterday to ask a judge to refer the question to the Luxembourg court.

The case, attended by Mr Wightman and Ms Cherry, is at a procedural stage, with judge Lord Doherty set to rule next week on whether the Scottish court can have a full hearing on the question of referral.

The UK Government’s lawyers argue that the notificati­on under Article 50 will not be withdrawn, so the case is “hypothetic­al” and should be dismissed by the court.

Aidan O’neill QC told the court: “The petitioner­s submit that the current Article 50 notice can, as a matter of European Union law, be revoked unilateral­ly by the UK acting in good faith.

“The petitioner­s acknowledg­e that, being an unresolved point of EU law, this issue can only authoritat­ively be determined by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU).

“The petitioner­s therefore request this court to make the necessary ... preliminar­y reference to the CJEU.”

He went on: “There is a live and genuine dispute between the parties and the statement that Article 50 will not be withdrawn is not such as to mean that there is no dispute or that this court is not able to exercise its supervisor­y jurisdicti­on ... Now is the time in which this matter has to be dealt with.”

David Johnston QC, for the UK Government, asked the court not to proceed with the case.

“The court should not entertain an entirely hypothetic­al debate and Court of Justice would not do so either,” he said.

He said the UK Government has committed itself to holding a vote in Parliament on the final deal reached with the EU, where Parliament can then vote to accept the deal or move on with no deal.

Lord Doherty will issue his decision “early next week”.

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 ??  ?? Representa­tives from four parties are named as the “petitioner­s” launching the case. From left: Joanna Cherry, Ross Greer, Alyn Smith, Catherine Stihler, Christine Jardine, Andy Wightman, David Martin.
Pictures: PA/HEMEDIA/ Edinburghe­litemedia.
Representa­tives from four parties are named as the “petitioner­s” launching the case. From left: Joanna Cherry, Ross Greer, Alyn Smith, Catherine Stihler, Christine Jardine, Andy Wightman, David Martin. Pictures: PA/HEMEDIA/ Edinburghe­litemedia.

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