Parliament Suspension is Unlawful- Scottish Judges Rule
Boris
Johnson’s suspension of the UK Parliament is unlawful, Scotland’s highest civil
court has ruled.
A panel of
three judges at the Court of Session found in favour of a cross-party group of
politicians who were challenging the prime minister's move.
The judges
said the PM was attempting to prevent Parliament holding the government to
account ahead of Brexit.
A UK
government appeal against the ruling will be heard by the Supreme Court in
London next week.
The Court of
Session decision overturns an earlier ruling from the court, which said last
week that Mr Johnson had not broken the law.
The current
five week suspension of Parliament, a process known as proroguing, started in
the early hours of Tuesday.
MPs are not
scheduled to return to Parliament until 14 October, when there will be a
Queen's Speech outlining Mr Johnson's legislative plans. The UK is due to leave
the EU on 31 October.
Opposition
parties have called for Parliament to be immediately recalled in the wake of
the court judgement, but Downing Street said this would not happen ahead of the
Supreme Court's ruling on the case.
Downing
Street also distanced itself from reports that quoted Number 10 sources as
suggesting the Scottish judges were politically biased, and insisted that the
prime minister has "absolute respect" for the independence of the
judiciary.
Mr Johnson
had previously insisted that it was normal practice for a new government to
prorogue Parliament, and that it was "nonsense" to suggest he was
attempting to undermine democracy.
But the
Court of Session judges were unanimous in finding that Mr Johnson was motivated
by the "improper purpose of stymieing Parliament", and he had
effectively misled the Queen in advising her to suspend Parliament.
They added:
"The Court will accordingly make an Order declaring that the prime
minister's advice to HM the Queen and the prorogation which followed thereon
was unlawful and is thus null and of no effect."
The group of
more than 70 largely pro-Remain MPs and peers behind the legal challenge were
headed by SNP MP Joanna Cherry, who said they felt "utterly
vindicated".
The
parliamentarians appealed to the Inner House of the Court of Session after
their original challenge to the suspension of Parliament was dismissed by judge
Lord Doherty last week.
Lord Doherty
said Mr Johnson had not broken the law by proroguing Parliament, and that it
was for MPs and the electorate to judge the prime minister's actions rather
than the courts.
But the
three Inner House judges said they disagreed with Lord Doherty's ruling because
this particular prorogation had been a "tactic to frustrate
Parliament" rather than a legitimate use of the power.
One of the
three judges, Lord Brodie, said: "This was an egregious case of a clear
failure to comply with generally accepted standards of behaviour of public
authorities.
"It was
to be inferred that the principal reasons for the prorogation were to prevent or
impede Parliament holding the executive to account and legislating with regard
to Brexit, and to allow the executive to pursue a policy of a no-deal Brexit
without further Parliamentary interference."
Lord
Drummond Young said that the UK government had failed to show a valid reason
for the prorogation, adding: "The circumstances, particularly the length
of the prorogation, showed that the purpose was to prevent such scrutiny.
"The
only inference that could be drawn was that the UK government and the prime
minister wished to restrict Parliament."
The High
Court in London says that advice given by the prime minister to the Queen to
suspend parliament is basically "political" - something the
government has argued from the get go - and so it's not a matter the courts
should get involved in because there are really no legal standards against
which to judge it.
Scotland's
highest court disagreed, strongly.
It ruled
that the prime minister's advice could be unlawful if its purpose was to stymie
parliamentary scrutiny. That's because parliament's role in scrutinising the
government is a central pillar of our constitution, which follows naturally
from the principles of democracy and the rule of law.
They are now
both hurtling towards the highest court in the land, the UK Supreme Court,
where that contradiction will be resolved. There will be a definitive ruling on
whether the prime minister acted unlawfully, or not - and that will determine
whether parliament is to be recalled in the lead up to 31 October.
And that is
how our constitution works. Through what's known as judicial review,
independent judges can stop the might of government in its tracks if what
ministers have done is unlawful. Because as lawyers like to say: "Be you
ever so mighty, the law is above you."
A spokesman
for Number 10 said it was "disappointed" by the decision, and would
appeal to the Supreme Court.
He added:
"The UK government needs to bring forward a strong domestic legislative
agenda. Proroguing Parliament is the legal and necessary way of delivering
this."
Scotland's
first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, said the ruling was of "enormous
constitutional significance", and that Parliament should be recalled
immediately to allow it to do the "real and substantive work of
scrutiny".
She added:
"The prime minister's behaviour has been outrageous and reckless, and has
shown a complete disregard for constitutional rules and norms."
Labour's
Shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer said Parliament should be recalled as
early as this afternoon.
He told the
BBC: "Most people didn't believe Boris Johnson, but for the courts to find
he has unlawfully shut down Parliament and that his motive wasn't the one he
said it was? That's very powerful.
"I call
on him to recall Parliament. Let's get it back open, and sitting this afternoon
and tomorrow, so we can debate what happens next and we can debate this
judgement."
Liberal
Democrat leader Jo Swinson, who was one of the politicians involved in the
case, said: "There is one reason why Boris Johnson has prorogued
Parliament and that's because he wants to force through his no-deal Brexit, and
he wants to do that without having scrutiny and without having to abide by the
normal rules."
And Dominic
Grieve, the former Conservative MP and attorney general who now sits as an
independent, said the prime minister should "resign very swiftly" if
he has misled the Queen.
The Court of
Session does not criticise the Queen's decision to prorogue Parliament at Boris
Johnson's request; it rules on the advice the Prime Minister gave the Queen.
But the ruling raises questions for the Palace and the constitutional role of
the Queen.
Although the
Queen was expected to grant the prorogation - there was precedent for
suspending parliament before the Queen's Speech, and she acts on the advice of
her ministers - she is not simply a rubber stamp for the government of the day.
How well was
the Queen advised? Should the Palace have pushed Downing Street harder as to
the reasons for the prorogation? The Queen has been drawn into the Brexit mire,
and the questions now go to the heart of her constitutional role.
If she has
no discretion at all over prorogation, what is her constitutional purpose? If
she has discretion, when would she use it? Traditionally politicians step very
carefully around these issues so as not embarrass the Queen and upset the
constitutional order. But these are far from traditional times.
High Court
judges in London have given their reasons why a similar legal challenge by
businesswoman Gina Miller was dismissed last week.
They said
they rejected her claim because the suspension of Parliament was a
"purely political" move and was therefore "not a matter for the
courts"
Ms Miller's
case was deemed "non justiciable" - not capable of being determined
by the courts - in a written summary of the reasoning behind the
judgment.
Lord Chief
Justice Lord Burnett, Master of the Rolls Sir Terence Etherton and President of
the Queen's Bench Division Dame Victoria Sharp said their conclusion was based
on "well-established and conventional grounds".
They said
the speed with which Parliament passed a bill to prevent a no-deal Brexit
highlighted a flaw in Ms Miller's argument.
"The
ability of Parliament to move with speed when it chooses to do so undermines
the underlying premise of the case for the claimant that prorogation would deny
Parliament the opportunity to do precisely what it has now done," the
judges said.
Ms Miller is
appealing the decision in the Supreme Court at the hearing which will take
place on 17 September.
FROM .bbc.com/news/uk-scotland
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