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  • Parliament is back following the Supreme Court's historic ruling

  • that Boris Johnson's proroguement of Westminster

  • was unlawful.

  • Peers and MPs returned today to debate lots

  • of different things.

  • In the House of Commons this morning, the mood

  • was very testy.

  • The most striking moments so far have

  • been from Geoffrey Cox, the attorney-general.

  • He was hauled up to the despatch box

  • to explain why he told the prime minister proroguement was

  • lawful when the Supreme Court said otherwise.

  • This parliament is a dead parliament.

  • It should no longer sit.

  • Twice they have been asked to let the electorate decide upon

  • whether they should continue to sit in their seats,

  • while they block 17.4m people's votes.

  • This parliament is a disgrace.

  • The main supporting MPs who opposed the proroguement made

  • their views known, and called on the prime minister

  • once again to resign.

  • No shame today.

  • No shame at all.

  • The fact that this government cynically manipulated

  • a prorogation to shut down this House

  • so that it couldn't work as a democratic assembly.

  • He knows that that is the truth.

  • And to come here with his barrister's bluster

  • to obfuscate the truth, and for a man like him,

  • a party like this, and a leader like this, this prime minister,

  • to talk about morals and morality is a disgrace.

  • In recent weeks, the prime minister

  • has tried to call a general election twice.

  • But he's failed to find that crucial two-thirds

  • majority of MPs that are required

  • through the fixed-term parliament at legislation.

  • The government might now look to a different way

  • of getting an election.

  • They could pass a single line bill, a piece of legislation

  • that forces an election on a particular date.

  • That's something Mr Cox has talked about,

  • and the prime minister might want

  • to bring about in the next couple of days.

  • If he does have that, then Britain

  • will be heading to the polls once again

  • to try and bring a solution to the Brexit crisis.

  • It could be support for Boris Johnson and his approach

  • for deal or no deal on October 31, or it could be Labour,

  • who have now rallied fully behind a second referendum

  • at their recent party conference.

  • Either way, the exchanges in Westminster

  • aren't going to get any quieter.

  • It's clear MPs are in a mood for a fight,

  • and the government is fighting back.

Parliament is back following the Supreme Court's historic ruling

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