Boris
Johnson flies back to face MPs' fury after court ruling
As decision
to shut parliament is quashed, humiliated PM says he disagrees
Heather
Stewart, Peter Walker and Rowena Mason
Tue 24 Sep
2019 21.18 BSTLast modified on Wed 25 Sep 2019 01.06 BST
A
humiliated Boris Johnson has been forced to cut short a set-piece visit to New
York and fly back to face furious MPs, after his decision to shut down
parliament was dramatically quashed by the supreme court.
After Lady
Hale delivered a crushing unanimous verdict in which she said Johnson’s advice
to the Queen to suspend parliament was, “unlawful, void and of no effect”, the
prime minister struck a defiant tone.
“Let’s be
absolutely clear that we respect the judiciary in our country and we respect
the court. I disagree profoundly with what they had to say,” he said, before
pressing ahead with a planned speech on the business links between the UK and
the US.
But a No 10
source criticised the 11 supreme court judges, saying they had made “a serious
mistake in extending its reach to these political matters.”
The leader
of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg, who travelled to Balmoral to
formalise the decision to suspend parliament with the Queen, reportedly told
colleagues on a cabinet conference call that the supreme court judgment was a
“constitutional coup”.
Opposition
MPs are determined to force Johnson to face questions in parliament, after the
Speaker, John Bercow, announced from College Green in Westminster that the
House of Commons would reconvene on Wednesday morning.
Jeremy
Corbyn was consulting with fellow opposition leaders on Tuesday evening about
how to exert maximum pressure on the prime minister and ensure he cannot escape
the legal obligation set out in the Benn bill to delay Brexit if he hasn’t
passed a deal by 19 October.
The Labour
leader, who on Tuesday delivered his conference speech 24 hours early after the
decision to recall parliament, was not expected to take the nuclear option of
tabling a vote of no confidence in the prime minister immediately, but MPs were
exploring ways of forcing Johnson to extend article 50.
Corbyn
would be unlikely to secure the support of Liberal Democrat or rebel Tory MPs
in a no-confidence vote, unless a no-deal Brexit has been definitively ruled
out – which many MPs believe means after Johnson has requested a Brexit delay.
However,
Johnson has repeatedly insisted that he has no intention of asking for an
extension if he has failed to secure a majority for a Brexit deal by 19
October.
Johnson,
who has lost a series of Commons votes since becoming prime minister, is due to
arrive in London around lunchtime on Wednesday after an overnight flight back
from the UN general assembly.
However, a
government official in New York with the prime minister said it was impossible
to say whether Johnson would appear before the Commons.
“I would
anticipate there would be statements to the house, I’m just not in a position
to say what they will be on,” the official said.
Downing
Street suggested the prime minister would continue to push for a snap general
election, while opposition parties attempted to inflict maximum embarrassment
on Johnson.
“In the
coming days parliament is likely to be put on the spot to see if it will have
an election or whether it will continue to keep the country in
zombie-parliament stasis. The only way out is an election and they will be
given another opportunity to let the public decide if and when we leave the
EU,” said a No 10 source.
Labour has
twice voted against motions tabled by the prime minister calling for a snap
poll, and Downing Street has sought to portray Corbyn as part of a Westminster
elite trying to block Brexit.
Corbyn
threw that language back at Johnson in his conference speech on Tuesday,
claiming the prime minister is “part of an elite that disdains democracy”.
At Labour’s
annual conference in Brighton, MPs and party strategists crowded around
television screens to watch Lady Hale deliver the court’s unanimous verdict.
There were
audible intakes of breath when she said Johnson’s advice to the Queen to
suspend parliament was, “unlawful, void and of no effect”. Corbyn made a speech
from the conference stage almost immediately, calling on the prime minister to
resign.
He then
brought forward his party conference speech to Tuesday afternoon, using it to
issue a rallying cry to activists and prepare the ground for a general
election.
The prime
minister flatly rejected the idea that he could resign over the defeat, and was
backed up by Donald Trump, when the pair held a joint press briefing in New
York. Asked if he might step down, Trump said: “I’ll tell you, I know him well,
he’s not going anywhere.” Johnson added: “No, no, no.”
Trump went
on to say the reporter concerned had asked “a very nasty question”.
The shadow
Brexit secretary, Keir Starmer, said the attorney general, Geoffrey Cox should
also appear in the Commons to face questions from MPs.
“The prime
minister needs to consider his position. He needs to come to parliament
straight away and make a statement so we can question him.
He added:
“Geoffrey Cox also needs to think about his position, and come and make a
statement so that he can be questioned about his legal advice.”
Amid the
confusion, Downing Street moved to try and shore up the position of Cox, whose
legal advice saying prorogation was lawful was leaked.
“Geoffrey
Cox is doing an excellent job and is no way, shape or form to blame for
anything that happened,” a No 10 source said.
The
Conservatives are due to hold their own annual conference in Manchester next
week, with Johnson’s setpiece speech scheduled to clash with prime minister’s
questions.
The
government would have to win a vote in parliament if it wanted to call a recess
to allow Tory conference to go ahead.
Downing
Street’s response to the crisis was inconsistent, with one part of the
operation claiming that Johnson was infuriated by the position in which he
found himself and another senior source claiming that the clash with the courts
was not unhelpful to his narrative that he was fighting for Brexit against an
obstructive establishment.
There were
also mixed messages from Johnson’s inner circle over how far to go in attacking
the supreme court judges and accusing them of becoming political, with Robert
Buckland, the justice secretary, urging that they should be respected.
The prime
minister’s official spokesman downplayed the idea that the judges had
interfered in politics, but another No 10 source said: “We think the supreme
court is wrong and has made a serious mistake in extending its reach to these
political matters. Further, the supreme court has made it clear that its
reasons are connected to the parliamentary disputes over, and timetable for,
leaving the European Union. We think this is a further serious mistake.”
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