It looks like this has not been tested before and so the Supreme Court will have to set precedent. I expect it will rule that the executive will have to be accountable to the judiciary, as otherwise a prime minister can silence the very parliament he or she is accountable to at will, exposing a gaping hole in our constitution. Normally the time this would take would not be at issue. But in this case, it is the longest prorogation in peacetime for hundreds of years, at the same time that the clock is running down for a massive constitutional change. I would trust that Dominic Grieve will win the day on this one. Particularly in the light of the ruling on Monday that the government must provide all the correspondence relating to prorogation by last Wednesday( now expired), which the government has failed to do.If it's not justiciable then short of a violent rebellion, what stops a malicious government from proroguing Parliament indefinitely? For the sake of democracy the judiciary must be able to rule on whether or not its intention and length are lawful.
Yes, I try to keep the cartoons simple, I have a tendency to put to much information in them.↪Punshhh I both love and hate your non-standard rotation."
I hadn't thought of that, in the EU they rotate in the other direction.
"One criticism though; the buses are missing the "£350 million" sign.
Thats ok, this illustrates the problem of populism, it generates divisions where is there are none, by exploiting moderate human behaviour.Yes, I bear that in mind, and I apologise to that "third", I didn't mean them.
Bring it on, anything is better than this. Remember it is only about a third of the population that has been brainwashed, another third is looking on in horror and astonishment.Just let them sober up and then we can consider letting them in again but without all the undeserved benefits they are enjoying now
Can’t deny that. But she did negotiate a Brexit deal, agreed to by the EU.
But perhaps worse than that deal is they’re giving up their one remaining bargaining chip: a no deal Brexit.
I don't think it's to late for the government of unity yet. The important thing is not to table the vote of no confidence to soon, because there is a risk in anything which dissolves Parliament and allows Johnson to squat in No 10. Parliament must be sitting until after the extension is achieved.One of which is that either by breaking the Benn law or by simply not appointing a commissioner, No deal can still be possibly accomplished. Alas, the idiotic democrats refused the no-confidence motion and government of unity that could have taken control... might be too late now.
Which seems to me to mean that the UK is going to *have* to cancel Article 50, or face the economic consequences of crashing out, which will almost certainly provoke a severe economic downturn.
Yes, but if this law is passed, Johnson will not be able to leave with no agreement. It’s all bluff and bluster.
Its the breath taking incompetence of Theresa May and the ERG which has left us in this mess. The opposition was happy to work out a cross party Brexit deal and would have voted it through ten months ago.Still can’t get Brexit through even 3 years later. Remainers like to pay lip-service to democracy while opposing the will of the people at all costs. Let’s see how long they can disguise their authoritarianism beneath their glittering generalities.
It seems to me that no matter how bad or stupid a politician or idea is, the BBC can be trusted to normalize and promote it in the name of journalistic objectivity.
Brexit per se. I mean, it's not a matter of voting for one side that supports Brexit, and another side that opposes it