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  • LIONEL BARBER: Britain's Supreme Court

  • has delivered a devastating defeat to Boris Johnson.

  • In a unanimous ruling, 11 judges have

  • ruled that his decision to suspend

  • Parliament, which was deliberating on Brexit,

  • was unlawful.

  • Here with me is Matthew Garrahan, the News Editor,

  • to discuss this, frankly, epic moment

  • in the history of Britain as a constitutional democracy.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: It was epic, Lionel.

  • How-- on a-- the scale of it, and the language,

  • the harshness of the language in this ruling

  • was quite unprecedented, wasn't it?

  • LIONEL BARBER: Well, Britain's Supreme Court

  • is only 10 years old.

  • It's not like the US Supreme Court that goes back to 1787.

  • But in a way, this was as big as a very important judgement back

  • in 1801, called Marbury versus Madison, where, essentially,

  • the US Supreme Court ruled against the executive,

  • and set out the parameters of power for the executive

  • and the legislature and the courts.

  • And this was this moment, even though we

  • have an unwritten constitution in the UK.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: Mm-hm.

  • And what do you think the immediate repercussions of it

  • will be?

  • LIONEL BARBER: Well, for Mr Johnson,

  • given the language, which was, again, ruthless,

  • it argued contrary to what the government said,

  • that this was a matter for the courts,

  • not just a matter of politics, that the executive had clearly

  • abused its powers, and that Parliament's role as holding

  • the executive to account, deliberating in public

  • on matters of state, that this-- all these matters

  • had been infringed.

  • So for Mr Johnson as prime minister,

  • he has some very hard questions to answer about

  • whether his position as prime minister is tenable.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: Which is quite something.

  • I mean, he's waking up in New York.

  • Currently, he's there on a visit--

  • LIONEL BARBER: To the UN.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: To the--

  • what does he do next?

  • I mean, Parliament will presumably reopen tomorrow.

  • And MPs will sit again.

  • What happens after that?

  • LIONEL BARBER: Well, first of all,

  • the court made clear that the Parliament had not actually

  • been prorogued because it was unlawful.

  • So they should, in fact, be sitting.

  • But they left it to the Speaker of the House of Commons, John

  • Bercow, to decide.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: Huge victory for him, isn't this?

  • LIONEL BARBER: A big one, and for Gina Miller,

  • by the way, who brought the suit in the first place

  • with Jo Cherry.

  • And by the way, another very important point,

  • that the Supreme Court ruled in exactly the same way as

  • strongly as the Supreme Court in Scotland, the Court of Session.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: Right.

  • LIONEL BARBER: So you have a sort

  • of unanimity between England, Wales, and Scotland.

  • That's important for the United Kingdom.

  • But what next?

  • Well, I think Mr Johnson's going to deliberate at the United

  • Nations with his inner circle.

  • And he's going to face a Parliament come back.

  • And he will have to answer questions

  • about whether his position is sustainable.

  • He's let it be known last night that he intended to stay on,

  • whatever the ruling.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: He also said he was going

  • to study the ruling carefully.

  • But we are in untested waters, aren't we?

  • I mean, for a British prime minister

  • to have been called in court that his actions were

  • unlawful is something we--

  • this is a new ground for us.

  • LIONEL BARBER: It definitely is.

  • And, you know, there is a history on Mr Johnson's

  • part of brazening things out, facing controversy,

  • from plagiarism to other matters, shall we say.

  • This, of course, is on a different scale.

  • This involves matters-- high matters-- of state,

  • constitutional propriety.

  • And just the way this thing was managed--

  • I mean, remember, he and his circle prorogue.

  • They decide to prorogue Parliament, ask

  • the Queen's support, which they got,

  • the royal assent for suspending Parliament.

  • I mean, essentially, the ruling supports the fact

  • that he misled the Queen.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: Yeah.

  • LIONEL BARBER: He said it was just to--

  • he wanted a new Parliament to discuss his new legislative

  • programme.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: Do you think, given this ruling, I mean,

  • the approach of his administration,

  • of his advisors--

  • Dominic Cummings, the key one--

  • has been to ride fairly roughshod over convention?

  • Do you think that this necessitates a change

  • if he stays?

  • LIONEL BARBER: I think it's important to recognise that Mr

  • Johnson and his Svengali adviser, Dominic Cummings,

  • said that in order to achieve Brexit,

  • we must get it by October the 31st, come what may.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: No ifs or buts.

  • LIONEL BARBER: No ifs or buts, because there's

  • been too much delay-- three years already

  • since the referendum.

  • And that's why they wanted to put pressure both on Parliament

  • and on the EU to get a deal.

  • There doesn't seem to be much progress here, by the way,

  • on that deal.

  • But my final point is that it's really important

  • to distinguish between constitutional propriety

  • and the Brexit question.

  • In effect, the judges were not saying

  • whether it was right to respect or not the referendum

  • result. They were saying the executive, Mr Johnson,

  • has infringed and abused his power regarding

  • Parliament's role.

  • And so that is quite different.

  • There will be people in the country--

  • and I'm sure some conservative newspapers--

  • who will denounce the judges as enemies of the people.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: Yes, enemies of the--

  • LIONEL BARBER: I think this is completely wrong.

  • It's very damaging for our democracy.

  • And they should respect the fact that this

  • was a unanimous judgement by the top judges

  • in the land on matters of constitutional propriety.

  • It goes to the heart of how our democracy can and should work.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: And finally, Lionel,

  • this case was so electric because it was in a sort

  • of grey area of our unwritten constitution.

  • There were some calls outside the court

  • that I heard just now for a more codified, formalised written

  • constitution.

  • Do you think that that is something

  • that we're going to get anywhere near in the--

  • LIONEL BARBER: I think it's premature--

  • MATT GARRAHAN: --coming months?

  • LIONEL BARBER: --to be moving towards a written constitution.

  • That's a very big move.

  • I think what you've seen today is the court adumbrate,

  • delineate the limits of power for the executive

  • and the role of democracy, of Parliament in our democracy.

  • That should be enough.

  • It should be enough to reflect on.

  • Let us just say this, though.

  • Given other matters of the constitution,

  • we know the strains within the United Kingdom.

  • We also know about the fact that maybe the House of Lords

  • isn't the most efficient--

  • it's a powerful scrutiny-- there are

  • other questions-- powerful scrutiny

  • of legislation, et cetera.

  • But there are some problems that we have.

  • But I think that's for another day.

  • What we should today celebrate is

  • that the judges stood up very clearly and unanimously

  • for the rule of law.

  • MATT GARRAHAN: Lionel, thank you very much.

LIONEL BARBER: Britain's Supreme Court

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