The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Who the main players are in the various ongoing battles

- SAM TOBIN

As the Supreme Court considers legal challenges to Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to prorogue Parliament, here is a look at the key players in the case before the UK’s highest court.

The court hears appeals on cases of the greatest public importance where it is considered there is an arguable point of law.

Now the Supreme Court, which will sit as a panel of 11 justices for only the second time in its 10-year history, must reconcile contradict­ory judgments issued by the English and Scottish courts.

GINA MILLER

The investment fund manager and campaigner first came to public prominence in 2016 when she launched a legal challenge to then-prime minister Theresa May’s decision to use the royal prerogativ­e to trigger Article 50, starting a two-year countdown to the UK’s departure from the EU.

The High Court ruled the prime minister did not have the power to trigger Article 50 without the authority of Parliament, a ruling ultimately upheld by the Supreme Court in January 2017.

Mr Johnson was appointed prime minister on July 24, after refusing to rule out proroguing Parliament during the contest to succeed Mrs May as leader of the Conservati­ve Party.

The Queen prorogued Parliament, on Mr Johnson’s advice on August 28 after Commons Leader Jacob ReesMogg, Lords Leader Baroness Evans and chief whip Mark Spencer flew to Balmoral for a Privy Council meeting.

A handwritte­n note of Mr Johnson’s dated August 16, replying to advice on prorogatio­n, said Parliament sitting in September was a “rigmarole introduced... to show the public that MPs were earning their crust, so I do not see anything especially shocking about this prorogatio­n”.

An unredacted version of the note leaked to Sky News revealed Mr Johnson wrote that the “rigmarole” had been “introduced by girly swot (former prime minister David) Cameron”.

JOANNA CHERRY AND OTHERS

Joanna Cherry, a barristert­urned-MP and the SNP’s justice and home affairs spokeswoma­n, is the lead claimant in the proceeding­s brought in Scotland.

The case is brought by a total of 79 petitioner­s, including Lib Dem leader

Jo Swinson, Green Party MP Caroline Lucas and Plaid Cymru’s Westminste­r leader Liz Saville Roberts.

SIR JOHN MAJOR

Sir John served as prime minister between 1990 and 1997, taking over from Margaret Thatcher and defeating Labour leader Neil Kinnock in the 1992 general election before losing to Tony Blair’s New Labour in 1997.

In July, after Mr Johnson refused to rule out prorogatio­n, Sir John told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that it would be “utterly and totally unacceptab­le” for any British premier to shut down Parliament.

The former prime minister said he would bring a judicial review against any attempt to do so and intervened in Mrs Miller’s High Court case in September. His lawyers have been given permission to make oral submission­s at the Supreme Court hearing.

However, Sir John himself controvers­ially prorogued Parliament in 1997, which prevented a report on the cash for questions scandal being considered by MPs.

BARONESS CHAKRABART­I

The peer was director of civil liberties organisati­on Liberty from 2003 to 2016, during which time she was described by the Sun newspaper as “the most dangerous woman in Britain”.

Following her appointmen­t in 2016 as the chairwoman of an inquiry into anti-Semitism in the Labour Party, Baroness Chakrabart­i was nominated to the House of Lords and subsequent­ly appointed Labour’s shadow attorney general.

RAYMOND MCCORD

The victims’ rights campaigner, whose son was murdered by loyalist paramilita­ries in 1997, is one of three individual­s bringing a legal challenge in Belfast, arguing a no-deal Brexit would damage the Northern Ireland peace process.

Cases in Northern Ireland cannot leapfrog straight to the Supreme Court, so Mr McCord’s case was heard by the Court of Appeal in Belfast on Monday – and he has also been given permission to intervene at the Supreme Court.

THE SUPREME COURT JUSTICES

For only the second time in the court’s history, an 11-strong panel of justices will hear the joined cases – the first time being Mrs Miller’s Article 50 case.

The panel will be headed by Supreme Court President Lady Hale and also includes deputy president Lord Reed, who will become president in January.

 ?? Picture: Getty Images. ?? Protesters gather outside the Supreme Court ahead of a hearing on the legality of proroguing Parliament.
Picture: Getty Images. Protesters gather outside the Supreme Court ahead of a hearing on the legality of proroguing Parliament.
 ??  ?? Gina Miller has launched a legal challenge against a High Court ruling.
Gina Miller has launched a legal challenge against a High Court ruling.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom