The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)
Legal bid to stop PM forcing no-deal Brexit to be heard
COURT: Judge agrees to fast-tracked hearing before deadline
A judge has agreed to a fast-tracked hearing about whether Boris Johnson can legally suspend Parliament to force through a no-deal Brexit.
A group of more than 70 MPs and peers is calling on the Scottish courts to rule that suspending Parliament to allow the UK to leave without a deal would be “unlawful and unconstitutional”.
The anti-Brexit campaigners filed a petition at the Court of Session in Edinburgh attempting to block the prime minister from being able to prorogue Parliament and called for the case to be heard before the October 31 Brexit deadline.
At a preliminary hearing, Lord Raymond Doherty agreed to expedite the timetable for the legal challenge to take place, setting the date for the substantive hearing for Friday September 6.
Lord Doherty rejected the campaigners’ attempts to have the whole hearing before one court to speed up the process, rather than the normal legal procedures.
He announced that, under the accelerated timetable, a substantive hearing would take place on September 6 – nearly eight weeks before the Halloween departure date – with a preliminary hearing on September 4 if required to rule on any points of legal contention between the two sides.
David Welsh QC – the lawyer working for the campaigners – argued the case needed to be heard “swiftly” because any judgment that came after the date the prime minister has committed to leaving the EU “would be rendered academic by the passing of time”.
Mr Welsh said: “There is ample evidence that the respondent will try to slow down as much as possible.”
Although acknowledging the “exceptional circumstances” of the case, Lord Doherty told Mr Welsh he would be refusing the request for the whole case to be heard by just one court.
Andrew Webster QC, acting on behalf of the Advocate General, rejected the suggestion the government wanted to delay proceedings to make any judgment irrelevant if not made by the October 31 deadline.
Mr Webster argued there was “no compelling need” for the case to be heard all be the inner house that would usually deal with first appearances and appeals, rather than the outer house, which hears the arguments from both the petitioners and respondents.
“We have more than 11 weeks until October 31,” he said.
The financial liability in the case was also set at £30,000 for each side, with the government’s lawyer persuading the judge to raise it from the £5,000 the campaigners wanted under a protective expenses order (PEO).
Mr Webster pointed out that, among the signatories of the legal challenge, were almost 70 MPs with combined parliamentary salaries of approximately £5.5 million.
The judge declared: “On balance I am persuaded – given that parliamentarians are bringing a matter, in their view, that is being raised as a matter of public service – that it is unfair to consider their personal assets when coming to a view on whether a PEO is made.”
The legal papers, submitted by the Good Law Project acting on behalf of the politicians, state: “Seeking to use the power to prorogue Parliament to avoid further parliamentary participation in the withdrawal of the UK from the EU is both unlawful and unconstitutional.”