Has boris found a way around the benn act? | thearticle
Has boris found a way around the benn act? | thearticle"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
Press conferences with the Prime Minister have turned into truly baffling occasions. At every one, Boris Johnson is asked what he will do in the likely event that he fails to get a new deal
out of the EU, and every time the reply is the same: getting a deal is still the preferred option, but if that turns out to be be impossible, he will neither ask for an extension, nor break
the law which requires him to ask for an extension (the so-called Benn Act). Cue, exasperated journalists exchange confused looks. But John Major thinks he’s solved the mystery. In a speech
today at the Spanish Embassy to the Centre for European Reform think-tank, the former Prime Minister explained that his “fear is that the Government will seek to bypass statute law, by
passing an Order of Council to suspend the Act until after 31 October”. “It is important to note” he went on, “that an Order of Council can be passed by Privy Councillors – that is
government ministers – without involving HM The Queen.” When rumours that the Prime Minister would use an Order of Council – an arcane piece of legislation – to block the Benn Act first
started circulating last night, they were dismissed as far-fetched. But when both James Cleverly (speaking on Question Time) and Dominic Cummings (on Sky News today) refused to pour cold
water on them, they gained traction. So, might the Government really attempt to nullify the Benn Act by removing the legal requirement for Mr Johnson to seek an extension? And what would
happen if it tried? The answer to the first part of the question is clear cut: yes, if it thinks it can get away with it. Johnson and Cummings feel that Remainers have used every trick in
the book to find loopholes to the Withdrawal Act 2018 (which made it the law that Britain leaves the EU), so would have no qualms at all about using a loophole of their own if it were
available. The second part – whether they can get away with it – is a different kettle of fish altogether. In his speech today, John Major used the strongest possible language to denounce
the manoeuvre, arguing that it would be in “flagrant defiance of Parliament” and “utterly disrespectful to the Supreme Court”. It seems very likely indeed that an intervention from Gina
Miller or Jolyon Maugham would bring the matter back to the courts, which is probably why the Government hasn’t tried the Order of Council tack already: after last time, Cummings knows that
he must make sure that all his ducks are in a row before he shoots. As for “defying Parliament”, though, John Major hasn’t got the measure of No.10 if he thinks that’ll scare the Prime
Minister into changing course. In the words of the Attorney General, this Parliament is a “dead Parliament…. With no moral right to sit on these green benches”. So in the Government’s book,
the fact that the move would rile MPs is probably a bonus. After the scenes in Parliament this week, the chances of the Prime Minister getting the cross party support he would need to get a
deal through parliament look vanishingly small. An election, no deal, a request for an extension, and a legal departure without a deal have also all been ruled out at various times. Three
years on from that fateful referendum, could it be that the fate of Brexit will come down to which side has the cleverest lawyers?
Trending News
Deformable model of a butterfly in motion on the example of attacus atlasJOURNAL OF THE MECHANICAL BEHAVIOR OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS Volume 133, September 2022, 105351 https://doi.org/10.1016/j....
Clint Eastwood once branded ‘intimidating as hell’ by Tom Hanks: ‘Treats us like horses!''Where Eagles Dare', starring Clint Eastwood, airs on ITV 4 today. The World War 2 action film, written by Alistair MacL...
Mht cet 2024 result date confirmed: when will maharashtra cet result be declaredAll those students who will successfully qualify the MHT CET Exam 2024 will be eligible to attend the MHT CET Counsellin...
2021 aarp livable communities engagement workshop: a conversation with mayors steve benjamin and satya rhodes-conwayMIKE WATSON: Now, I’d like to turn to our closing panel for the workshop: _Looking Forward, Inclusive Engagement and Rec...
Eric yarber expected to join rams' staff as receivers coachEric Yarber, UCLA’s receivers coach since 2012, is expected to join the Rams’ staff. Yarber, 53, attended Los Angeles Cr...
Latests News
Has boris found a way around the benn act? | thearticlePress conferences with the Prime Minister have turned into truly baffling occasions. At every one, Boris Johnson is aske...
Army corps of engineers denies permit to controversial alaska gold mineThe U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has denied a permit for the massive Pebble Mine project in Alaska – a proposed open-pit...
AdweekEditor’s Picks THE ADWEEK RESOURCE LIBRARY Be a better marketer and get access to the latest Adweek-created guides, excl...
France's new property declaration form: 2024 rules and fines explained_Article published March 6, updated March 13_ The majority of homeowners who completed France's new _Biens Immobili...
Forget marvel, santoor pan masala ads are the cinematic universe we didn’t know we needed - scoopwhoopIt’s one of those days when you retrieve a piece of information buried in the cache of the Internet and you didn’t know ...