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Related: About this forumBrexit: shutting down parliament 'gravest abuse of power in living memory'
Source: The Guardian
Brexit: shutting down parliament 'gravest abuse of power in living memory'
Exclusive: legal advice states action to force no-deal Brexit would be open to court battle
Heather Stewart in Biarritz and Rowena Mason
Mon 26 Aug 2019 20.00 BST Last modified on Tue 27 Aug 2019 01.00 BST
Boris Johnson would be committing the gravest abuse of power and attack on UK constitutional principle in living memory if he shuts down parliament to help force through a no-deal Brexit, according to legal advice obtained by Labour.
In a six-page document prepared for Jeremy Corbyn, the shadow attorney general, Shami Chakrabarti, laid out how any such move by the prime minister would be open to immediate legal challenge in the courts.
She said it could be subject to judicial review and the courts might well even grant interim injunctive relief in order to allow both houses of parliament to continue to sit and discharge their primary and sovereign constitutional role in this current moment of national crisis.
The advice from Chakrabarti, a barrister, was commissioned by Labour after leaked emails showed No 10 had sought the counsel of Geoffrey Cox, the attorney general, on whether a five-week prorogation from 9 September might be possible to avoid a confidence vote and help enable a no-deal Brexit.
The initial legal guidance for No 10 was that shutting parliament may be possible, unless action being taken in the courts by anti-Brexit campaigners succeeds in the meantime.
-snip-
Exclusive: legal advice states action to force no-deal Brexit would be open to court battle
Heather Stewart in Biarritz and Rowena Mason
Mon 26 Aug 2019 20.00 BST Last modified on Tue 27 Aug 2019 01.00 BST
Boris Johnson would be committing the gravest abuse of power and attack on UK constitutional principle in living memory if he shuts down parliament to help force through a no-deal Brexit, according to legal advice obtained by Labour.
In a six-page document prepared for Jeremy Corbyn, the shadow attorney general, Shami Chakrabarti, laid out how any such move by the prime minister would be open to immediate legal challenge in the courts.
She said it could be subject to judicial review and the courts might well even grant interim injunctive relief in order to allow both houses of parliament to continue to sit and discharge their primary and sovereign constitutional role in this current moment of national crisis.
The advice from Chakrabarti, a barrister, was commissioned by Labour after leaked emails showed No 10 had sought the counsel of Geoffrey Cox, the attorney general, on whether a five-week prorogation from 9 September might be possible to avoid a confidence vote and help enable a no-deal Brexit.
The initial legal guidance for No 10 was that shutting parliament may be possible, unless action being taken in the courts by anti-Brexit campaigners succeeds in the meantime.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/aug/26/brexit-shutting-down-parliament-gravest-abuse-of-power-in-living-memory-legal-advice
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Brexit: shutting down parliament 'gravest abuse of power in living memory' (Original Post)
Eugene
Aug 2019
OP
pbmus
(12,422 posts)1. Looks like England is dealing with a bigger buffoon than the Con...
B Stieg
(2,410 posts)2. What a mess! Sheesh.
dem4decades
(11,297 posts)3. Another Putin victory.