Johnson
could face no-confidence vote next week to halt no-deal Brexit
SNP’s
Stewart Hosie says opposition must unite and that Corbyn must get first chance
to be PM
Sarah Marsh
@sloumarsh
Sat 28 Sep
2019 09.57 BSTLast modified on Sat 28 Sep 2019 12.18 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/sep/28/boris-johnson-no-deal-brexit-no-confidence-vote-snp
The prime
minister, Boris Johnson, could be removed as early as next week under plans
being drawn up by opposition party leaders. Photograph: Daniel
Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images
There could
be a vote of no confidence in the government next week in order to remove Boris
Johnson as prime minister and secure a Brexit date extension, a senior Scottish
National party MP has said.
Following
talks between opposition party leaders at Westminster, Stewart Hosie said the
move appeared to be the only way of ensuring Johnson did not push through a
no-deal Brexit on 31 October.
“We have to
do that because there is now no confidence that the prime minister will obey
the law and seek the extension that parliament voted for only a few weeks ago,”
he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.
“If we are
serious about the extension, that is the only game in town.”
Hosie, a
former SNP deputy leader, said the aim was to stop a no-deal Brexit, and that
all opposition parties and Tory rebels needed to be united.
The SNP MP
urged the Liberal Democrat leader, Jo Swinson, to get behind the move, which
could lead to Jeremy Corbyn being installed in No 10. Swinson has previously
said she would not put Corbyn in Downing Street, even for a short period.
“If another name came forward that was
acceptable to everybody – a Ken Clarke or Dominic Grieve-type figure – then
self-evidently that would be a good thing to do,” Hosie said. “But it is also
self-evidently the case that the second-largest party [Labour] should have the
first chance to form that administration.
“If Jo
Swinson and the Lib Dems are actually serious about stopping Brexit then they
need to stop playing political games [and] get on board with everybody else.”
Hosie said
it was a short-term procedure to get an extension to article 50 and then have a
general election.
Scotland’s
first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, has said she is open-minded about Corbyn
becoming an interim prime minister, in order to secure an extension to Brexit
and call a general election.
She told
BBC Scotland: “We are all going to have to compromise, we are all going to have
to swallow our pride and put up with something for a matter of days to allow
that to happen, and get on with it.”
Her
representative in Westminster, Ian Blackford, said the SNP was “desperate” for
an election.
Brexit
Johnson
‘whipping up riot fears to avoid Brexit extension’
Labour
claims that PM is aiming to invoke emergency powers using the Civil
Contingencies Act
Toby Helm
and Michael Savage
Sat 28 Sep
2019 20.01 BSTLast modified on Sun 29 Sep 2019 00.10 BST
Boris
Johnson is whipping up fears of rioting and deaths on the streets if Brexit is
not delivered by 31 October so that he can try to invoke emergency powers and
avoid extending the UK’s EU membership beyond that date, Labour’s Brexit
spokesman, Keir Starmer, claimed on Saturday.
After a
week in which the prime minister was accused by MPs from all the main parties,
including senior Tories, of inciting violence by accusing Remainers of Brexit
“surrender” and “betrayal”, Starmer said it was part of an orchestrated plan to
stoke a sense of outrage among Leave voters and create civil unrest, so an extension
might be avoided.
Increasingly
MPs across the House of Commons believe Downing Street is considering using the
Civil Contingencies Act 2004, which grants special powers in the event of a
national emergency, as a way to override the so-called Benn act, which mandates
the prime minister to seek a delay to Brexit if no deal has been struck with
Brussels by 19 October.
Johnson’s
description of the act as the “surrender act” provoked heated exchanges in
parliament last Wednesday. Female MPs invoked the memory of their murdered
colleague Jo Cox and said they feared for their safety. on Saturday night the
prime minister reinforced his rhetoric in a newspaper interview saying his
“humdrum political metaphor” could just as well have been the “abject
capitulation act”, and questioned whether the EU had been consulted during the
bill’s drafting.
Starmer
told the Observer that Downing Street’s strategy was clearly to stoke tensions
but he warned Johnson that any attempt to invoke the Civil Contingencies Act
would be defeated in the courts.
“Whipping up the idea of riots or even deaths
if we do not leave the EU on 31 October is the height of irresponsibility,”
Starmer said. “But it is also pretty obviously being orchestrated. If this is
part of a government plan to misuse powers under emergency legislation, I can
assure the prime minister we will defeat him in court and in parliament.”
Johnson is
expected to continue his attacks on Remainers this week at the Tory conference
in Manchester where the slogan will be “Get Brexit Done”.
Former Tory
MP and attorney general Dominic Grieve said he could see no other possible way
Downing Street could comply with the law and deliver Brexit on time. “The Civil
Contingencies Act is the only possible route I can imagine they can be thinking
of,” Grieve said. “But if they do try to do this it would be a constitutional
outrage. And if it passed through parliament it would be immediately challenged
in the courts.”
Allies of
Johnson have warned in recent days that the UK will face civil disorder on the
scale of the gilets jaunes protests in France if Brexit were to be delayed or
reversed.
Senior
Labour sources said that possible use of the Civil Contingencies Act to trump
the Benn act was on a list of options that the party’s legal advisers believe
Downing Street might use.
After 11
supreme court judges ruled unanimously last week that Johnson’s decision to
shut parliament for five weeks had been unlawful, and declared the prorogation
null and void, MPs say there are signs of increasing desperation at No 10 as it
faces the prospects of more defeats in parliament and the courts.
On Saturday
night, Johnson signalled that he would again challenge the judiciary by
introducing US-style political screening of supreme court judges before they
are appointed. Speaking to the Sunday Telegraph, the prime minister said: “If
judges are to pronounce on political questions in this way, then there is at
least an argument that there should be some form of accountability. The lessons
of America are relevant.” The Law Society and the Bar Council both said last
week that politically appointed judges would threaten the independence of the
judiciary.
Some minor
parties are pressing hard to pass a motion censuring Johnson, forcing him to
apologise for the language he has used against his Brexit opponents. Plaid
Cymru’s Liz Saville-Roberts has even asked Speaker John Bercow whether she can
table a motion to impeach Johnson. Another avenue being examined is to censure
Johnson should he appear before the liaison committee of MPs.
Last week
the former Tory prime minister John Major said he feared the Johnson government
would try to bypass the Benn Act through an order of council. “It is important
to note that an order of council can be passed by privy councillors – that is
government ministers – without involving HM the Queen,” he said, adding: “I
should warn the prime minister that – if this route is taken – it will be in
flagrant defiance of parliament and utterly disrespectful to the supreme court.
It would be a piece of political chicanery that no one should ever forgive or
forget.”
The Civil
Contingencies Act provides the government with powers to create emergency
regulations at times of national crisis and threats to safety (including
wartime), emergencies that threaten “serious damage to human welfare”, or to
the environment or the security of the UK. Damage to human welfare is defined
in the act to include disruption to transport networks or to the supply of
food, money, energy, or health services.
Downing St
sources said it was not planning to use the Civil Contingencies Act. A spokesman
added: “The prime minister is determined to deliver Brexit on time and he will
abide by the law.”
Senior
Labour sources played down suggestions by the Scottish National Party that the
opposition parties could this week table a vote no confidence in Boris
Johnson’s government, with a view to installing a caretaker administration led
by Jeremy Corbyn who would then apply for an extension to Brexit and call an
election.
While
Labour is not publicly ruling out the move, shadow cabinet members privately
say they will only move once an extension to Brexit has been guaranteed. The
Liberal Democrats and other opposition parties, as well as former Tory MPs and
independents, say they will not under any circumstances agree to install Corbyn
in Downing Street, even temporarily.
Anna
Soubry, leader of the Independent Group for Change, which has five MPs, said:
“We need to keep the prime minister held firmly accountable for the mess he has
created. We do not want any votes of no confidence until that extension is up
and running and even then I will only support a vote of no confidence knowing
that it will result in a government of national unity resulting in a people’s
vote confirmatory referendum.
“Anything
else gives Johnson his escape route. His only plan B is a general election and
a general election would not solve Brexit. Only a referendum will sort out
Brexit.”
On Saturday
the Liberal Democrats announced that Dr Phillip Lee, who recently defected from
the Tories, will be their candidate to fight the veteran Tory and hard-line
Brexiter John Redwood in Wokingham, to set up a Leave v Remain contest in the
Berkshire seat.
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