Johnson
under pressure to recall parliament following Scottish ruling
The PM must
resign if supreme court rules he misled the Queen, says Dominic Grieve
Latest
political developments - live updates
Rowena
Mason , Heather Stewart and Rajeev Syal
Wed 11 Sep
2019 15.03 BSTFirst published on Wed 11 Sep 2019 10.55 BST
Boris
Johnson is under intense pressure to recall parliament following the Scottish
ruling that prorogation was unlawful, with MPs branding his refusal to do so
authoritarian and an affront to democracy.
Labour, the
SNP and Lib Dems all demanded an urgent recall of parliament to allow scrutiny
of the government’s Brexit plans, after Scottish appeal court judges ruled
against Johnson’s decision to suspend parliament in the run-up to the October
Brexit deadline.
The prime
minister was facing outrage and the prospect of more protests, as No 10 made
clear that parliament would not be reinstated unless Johnson was ordered to do
so at appeal.
Downing
Street said it was not under any obligation to bring parliament back into
session following the Scottish ruling but added that the government would be
bound by the judgment of the supreme court. “As a matter of fact, parliament
remains prorogued,” a No 10 spokesman said.
Amid fury
that Johnson was effectively ignoring a Scottish court’s judgement, Downing
Street also became embroiled in a row about whether a No 10 source had briefed
anonymously against Scottish judges, implying that campaigners had chosen a
court in Edinburgh because of political bias.
The source
told the Sun: “We note that last week the High Court in London did not rule
that prorogation was unlawful. The legal activists choose the Scottish courts
for a reason”.
The prime
minister’s official spokesman hit back at the idea that Johnson’s
administration was in any way attacking Scottish judges, saying: “Absolutely
not, we have absolute respect for the independence of the judiciary.”
“There are now contradictory judgments in the
English and Scottish courts, and the matter will be considered by the supreme
court next week,” he added.
However,
the damage had been done, as opposition parties seized on the briefing. The SNP
released an advert saying: “Sources at No 10 have responded by questioning the
political neutrality of the Scottish judges. The Tories at Westminster are
effectively saying: Scottish democracy must be ignored. Scots Law must be
ignored.”
Downing
Street was also facing accusations that Johnson had misled the Queen by
advising her that prorogation was legal.
With
tensions rising, Dominic Grieve, the former Tory cabinet minister, who had the
whip withdrawn by Johnson last week, said the prime minister must resign if it
turns out that he had given her the wrong advice. “Boris Johnson will find
himself in an untenable position in Parliament ... every member that believes
in our constitution would simply say, it’s over,” he told the BBC.
Pressed on
whether the PM lied to the Queen about the reasoning behind the prorogation,
Johnson’s spokesman referred journalists to the arguments laid out by the
government’s lawyers during the court cases.
“The answer
on why parliament has been prorogued is unchanged. As we’ve said, the current
parliamentary session is the longest parliamentary session in almost 400 years.
In recent months it’s been one of the least active. The PM said on his first
day in the job that the time has come to act, to take decisions, to give strong
leadership and to change this country for the better. He wants to put before
MPs a proper domestic legislative programme. This will be a Queen’s Speech
focused on helping the NHS, fighting violent crime and cutting the cost of
living.”
Ian
Blackford, the SNP leader in Westminster, demanded that Johnson listen to the
Scottish court and told him to “abide by the rule of law”.
“Every day
that Parliament remains suspended, you and the UK Government are shutting down
democracy,” he wrote in a letter to the prime minister.
Keir
Starmer, the shadow Brexit secretary, also urged Johnson to “open those doors”
and so that MPs can hold the prime minister to account.
“This is
really important. The idea of shutting down parliament offended people across
the country and then they felt they weren’t being told the truth,” he said.
“I think
that what I need to do, and what others need to do, is to get back to
parliament and open those doors and get back in, and get Boris Johnson back in
parliament so we can hold him properly to account.”
The Lib
Dems also called for parliament to be restored. Tom Brake, the Lib Dem shadow
Brexit secretary, accused Johnson of authoritarianism and “trampling on the
very values and principles the United Kingdom was founded upon”.
Some Labour
MPs – including some of those who took part in Monday night’s rowdy late-night
scenes in the House of Commons – urged Jeremy Corbyn to issue a three-line whip
to summon them back to Westminster.
Clive Lewis
said: “I am going to be discussing this with others; but there is an argument
that that judgment now stands, and that the prorogation is illegal; and until
it’s challenged and a new judgment is made in a higher court, the prorogation
has no legal basis.
“There is
an argument for MPs to rock up and start taking back control of the agenda –
and start going through the Yellowhammer documents, and everything else that we
have asked for.” He suggested Corbyn could “initiate a three-line whip”, to
recall colleagues.
Only one MP
– Labour’s Kevin Brennan – was outside the House of Commons ready to stage a
vigil on Wednesday, with the chamber instead filled by school children and
tourists having tours of parliament. But there were some moves underway for
wider protests in the coming days.
Union leaders
called on Johnson to recall parliament or face further protest and court
proceedings.
Tim Roache,
the general secretary of the GMB, said: “Shutting down parliament for your own
ends at a time of national crisis, when people’s jobs and livelihoods are on
the line, beggars belief.
“The prime
minister needs to heed this warning, get MPs back to Westminster and sort out
the mess we’re in.”
Len
McCluskey, the head of Unite, which is Labour’s largest corporate donor, told
Sky News that if Johnson goes to Scotland he could be subjected to a citizen’s
arrest.
“It is
quite extraordinary what the Scottish courts have ruled. My advice to the prime
minister is don’t go up to Scotland, you’re liable to face a citizen’s arrest,
so he’d best keep in his bunker somewhere in either Eton or Westminster.”
Manuel
Cortes, head of the TSSA, called for Johnson to be arrested. “Parliament must
be immediately reopened – but Johnson should be in jail not No 10. He’s broken
the law, is not fit to hold office and along with this disgraceful Government
must be held to account,” he said.
Earlier,
before the judgment was released, Starmer had told delegates that Johnson must
now bow to the will of parliament and seek an extension to article 50 if he
fails to get as deal by 19 October.
“Over the
summer we worked across parliament to build consensus for legislation to
prevent no deal at the end of October. As of Monday, that is now law.
“It means
that if the prime minister fails to get a Brexit deal by 19 October – as looks
increasingly inevitable – or a mandate for no deal – which is equally unlikely
– he will have to seek and accept an extension to article 50.
“The legal
advice is clear that the prime minister must abide by this. I shouldn’t have to
say this to the prime minister – accept that parliament has spoken, accept you
have no mandate for no deal, and be clear that you will follow the law,” he
said.
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