UK Parliament to be Suspended in September
Parliament
will be suspended just days after MPs return to work in September - and only a
few weeks before the Brexit deadline.
Boris
Johnson said a Queen's Speech would take place after the suspension, on 14
October, to outline his "very exciting agenda".
But it means
the time MPs have to pass laws to stop a no-deal Brexit on 31 October would be
cut.
House of
Commons Speaker John Bercow said it was a "constitutional outrage".
The Speaker,
who does not traditionally comment on political announcements, continued:
"However it is dressed up, it is blindingly obvious that the purpose of
[suspending Parliament] now would be to stop [MPs] debating Brexit and
performing its duty in shaping a course for the country."
Labour
leader Jeremy Corbyn said: "Suspending Parliament is not acceptable, it is
not on. What the prime minister is doing is a smash and grab on our democracy
to force through a no deal," he said.
He said when
MPs return to the Commons next Tuesday, "the first thing we'll do is
attempt legislation to prevent what [the PM] is doing", followed by a vote
of no confidence "at some point".
Three
Conservative members of the Queen's Privy Council took the request to suspend
Parliament to the monarch's Scottish residence in Balmoral on Wednesday morning
on behalf of the prime minister.
It has now
been approved, allowing the government to suspend Parliament no earlier than
Monday 9 September and no later than Thursday 12 September, until Monday 14
October.
Leader of
the House Jacob Rees-Mogg, who was at the meeting with the Queen, said the move
was a "completely proper constitutional procedure."
Earlier, Mr
Johnson said suggestions the suspension was motivated by a desire to force
through a no deal were "completely untrue".
He said he
did not want to wait until after Brexit "before getting on with our plans
to take this country forward", and insisted there would still be
"ample time" for MPs to debate the UK's departure.
"We
need new legislation. We've got to be bringing forward new and important bills
and that's why we are going to have a Queen's Speech," Mr Johnson added.
Shutting
down Parliament - known as prorogation - happens after the prime minister
advises the Queen to do it.
The decision
to do it now is highly controversial because opponents say it would stop MPs
being able to play their full democratic part in the Brexit process.
A number of
high profile figures, including former Prime Minister John Major, have
threatened to go to the courts to stop it, and a legal challenge led by the
SNP's justice spokeswoman, Joanna Cherry, is already working its way
through the Scottish courts.
After the
announcement, Sir John said he had "no doubt" Mr Johnson's motive was
to "bypass a sovereign Parliament that opposes his policy on Brexit",
and he would continue to seek legal advice.
BBC royal
correspondent Jonny Dymond said it was established precedent to prorogue
Parliament before a Queen's Speech, albeit generally more briefly, and rarely,
if ever, at such a constitutionally charged time.
He said it
was "Her Majesty's Government" in name only and it was her role to
take the advice of her ministers, so she would prorogue Parliament if asked to.
While it is
not possible to mount a legal challenge to the Queen's exercise of her personal
prerogative powers, BBC legal affairs correspondent Clive Coleman said a
judicial review could be launched into the advice given to her by the prime
minister - to determine whether that advice was lawful.
This has
been an extraordinarily long Parliamentary session, and governments have the
right to shut up shop and return to announce their proposals in a new one, with
all the golden carriages, fancy Westminster costumes, banging of doors and
splendour that goes with it.
But that new
timetable means Parliament will be suspended for longer than had been expected
- it's only a matter of days, but those are days that might matter enormously.
Boris
Johnson secured his place in No 10 by promising he'd do whatever it takes to
leave the EU at Halloween, so this decisive and intensely risky plan will
satisfy many of those who backed him.
But some
others in his government are worried - moving now, even with the accompanying
controversy, he sets the stage and the terms for an epic fight with MPs on all
sides.
The PM says
he wants to leave the EU on 31 October with a deal, but it is "do or
die" and he is willing to leave without one rather than miss the deadline.
That
position has prompted a number of opposition MPs to come together to try to
block a possible no deal, and on Tuesday they announced that they intended to
use parliamentary process to do so.
But with
Parliament set to be suspended, opponents have only a few days next week to
push for their changes.
Senior Tory backbencher
and former attorney general Dominic Grieve said the move by Mr Johnson could
lead to a vote of no confidence - something opposition parties have left on the
table as another option to stop no deal.
"There
is plenty of time to do that if necessary [and] I will certainly vote to bring
down a Conservative government that persists in a course of action which is so
unconstitutional," he said.
Scotland's
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said MPs must come together to stop the plan
next week, or "today will go down in history as a dark one indeed for UK
democracy".
Mr Johnson
has written to MPs to outline his plan, adding: "There will be a
significant Brexit legislative programme to get through but that should be no
excuse for a lack of ambition!"
He mentioned
the NHS, tackling crime, infrastructure investment and the cost of living as
important issues.
He also
called on Parliament to show "unity and resolve" in the run up to the
31 October so the government "stands a chance of securing a new deal"
with the EU.
But a senior
EU source told the BBC's Brussels correspondent Adam Fleming the bloc's
position was clear and was not contingent on the machinations of the UK
Parliament.
There has
been considerable anger at Mr Johnson's move from across the political
spectrum.
Former Tory
Chancellor Philip Hammond called it "profoundly undemocratic".
The leader
of the Liberal Democrats, Jo Swinson, said it was a "dangerous and
unacceptable course of action".
"He
knows the people would not choose a no deal and that elected representatives
wouldn't allow it. He is trying to stifle their voices," she said.
The leader
of the SNP in Westminster, Ian Blackford, accused Mr Johnson of "acting
like a dictator", while First Minister of Wales Mark Drakeford said he
wanted to "close the doors" on democracy.
Others,
though, have defended the plan.
Conservative
Party Chairman James Cleverly said setting out a legislative programme via a
Queen's Speech was what "all new governments do".
US President
Donald Trump tweeted his support for Mr Johnson, saying it "would be
very hard" for Mr Corbyn to seek a no-confidence vote against the PM,
"especially in light of the fact that Boris is exactly what the UK has
been looking for".
Brexit Party
MEP Alex Phillips said MPs "only had themselves to blame" for the
move.
She told BBC
News: "They have made themselves the obstacle in front of delivering the
referendum result. Boris Johnson is saying he now needs to remove that
obstacle, and quite right too."
The leader
of the DUP, Arlene Foster, also welcomed the decision to suspend Parliament and
have a Queen's Speech, but said the terms of her party's confidence and supply
agreement with the Conservatives would now be reviewed.
"This
will be an opportunity to ensure our priorities align with those of the
government," she added.
Parliament
is normally suspended - or prorogued - for a short period before a new session
begins. It is done by the Queen, on the advice of the prime minister.
Parliamentary
sessions normally last a year, but the current one has been going on for more
than two years - ever since the June 2017 election.
When
Parliament is prorogued, no debates and votes are held - and most laws that
haven't completed their passage through Parliament die a death.
This is
different to "dissolving" Parliament - where all MPs give up their
seats to campaign in a general election.
The last two
times Parliament was suspended for a Queen's Speech that was not after a
general election the closures lasted for four and 13 working days respectively.
If this
prorogation happens as expected, it will see Parliament closed for 23 working
days.
MPs have to
approve recess dates, but they cannot block prorogation
FROM bbc.com/news/uk-politics-
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