The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Suspension not to ‘stymie’ debate: QC

Claim prorogatio­n was for ‘improper purpose’ refuted

- SIAN HARRISON

Boris Johnson did not advise the Queen to suspend parliament for five weeks for any “improper purpose”, Supreme Court justices have heard.

Sir James Eadie QC, representi­ng the prime minister, told the 11-strong panel that the suggestion the prorogatio­n was intended to “stymie” parliament ahead of Brexit is “untenable”.

During a series of exchanges with the judges on the second day of a historic hearing in London, the barrister also said any attempt to call Mr Johnson to give evidence in court would have been “resisted like fury” had it been made.

The court is hearing appeals on two separate challenges in the English and Scottish courts over the prorogatio­n of parliament, which produced different outcomes.

Sir James told the court yesterday: “Parliament has been considerin­g Brexit for months and years.

“It has had the opportunit­y to make whatever legislativ­e provisions it has wished over that period and it has, in fact, made a plethora of legislativ­e provisions – including and starting with the authorisat­ion of the giving of the

Article 50 notice.”

He also said decisions to prorogue parliament “are inherently and fundamenta­lly political in nature” and not a matter for the courts.

However, during an exchange with Lord Reed, one of the justices hearing the case, he accepted there are limits to the government’s prerogativ­e power and that it is part of the court’s role to determine what those limits are and whether they have been exceeded.

Lord Wilson asked Sir James why no statement had been provided to explain why the prorogatio­n decision was taken.

He said: “Isn’t it odd that nobody has signed a witness statement to say ‘this is true, these are the true reasons for what was done’?”

Sir James replied: “My lord, we have the witness statements we have.

“My submission is that, in light of the case law only, it remains open to the court to make judgments on the facts on the basis of the underlying documents that have been produced.”

Sir James said the documents provided to the court were from the “top level” of government and included a note of cabinet discussion­s on prorogatio­n.

He also said, in response to a question from Lord Carnwath, that he had never been involved in a judicial review where the minister responsibl­e for the decision under challenge had given a witness statement.

Lord Pannick QC, representi­ng Mr Johnson’s opponent Gina Miller, told the court on Tuesday that it was a “remarkable feature” of the case that no statement had been provided to the court giving reasons for the prime minister’s decision.

The appeals arise out of earlier rulings in which leading judges reached different conclusion­s.

At the High Court in London, the Lord Chief Justice Lord Burnett and two other judges rejected a challenge against the prime minister’s prorogatio­n move by campaigner and businesswo­man Mrs Miller.

But in Scotland, a cross-party group of MPs and peers won a ruling from the Inner House of the Court of Session that Mr Johnson’s prorogatio­n decision was unlawful because it was “motivated by the improper purpose of stymieing parliament”.

 ?? Pictures: PA. ?? Gina Miller, right, leaves the Supreme Court, London, where justices will continue to hear submission­s today, the third and final day of the hearing, although it is not yet known when they will give a ruling.
Pictures: PA. Gina Miller, right, leaves the Supreme Court, London, where justices will continue to hear submission­s today, the third and final day of the hearing, although it is not yet known when they will give a ruling.
 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Boris Johnson during a visit to Whipps Cross University Hospital in Leytonston­e.
Picture: Getty. Boris Johnson during a visit to Whipps Cross University Hospital in Leytonston­e.

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