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Boris Johnson hints he will refuse to resign if Supreme Court rules he misled the Queen over suspension of parliament

Asked if finding that he concealed motive to silence parliament over Brexit would make his position ‘untenable’, the prime minister replies, ‘No’

Rob Merrick
Deputy Political Editor
Monday 23 September 2019 22:29 BST
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Supreme Court told 'the mother of parliaments shut down by the father of lies' in extraordinary attack on PM

Boris Johnson has hinted he plans to cling to office even if the Supreme Court decides he misled the Queen when he shut down parliament, in Tuesday’s momentous ruling.

Asked if such a finding – that he concealed his true motive was to silence parliament over Brexit – would make his position “untenable”, the prime minister replied: “No”.

Until now, Mr Johnson has refused to comment on what he will do if the government loses the Supreme Court action, in a judgment to be delivered at 10.30am.

It will still be dark in New York City when he hears the verdict on accusations that he acted unlawfully, with an “abuse of power”, by proroguing parliament for five weeks.

Most legal experts appear to believe the 11 justices will find against the government, plunging Britain into an unprecedented constitutional crisis.

The prime minister’s case is that the shut-down, from 9 September until 14 October, was to allow a new legislative agenda in a Queen’s Speech, after the longest session since the 17th century.

The High Court in London ruled in favour of the government, that the prorogation was “purely political” and not a matter for the courts.

But, in Scotland, a cross-party group of MPs and peers won a ruling that the decision was unlawful because it was “motivated by the improper purpose of stymieing parliament”.

Most toxically for Mr Johnson, it found his “advice” to the Queen was untrue – noting the apparent refusal of either ministers or senior civil servants to provide sworn witness statements.

The Supreme Court heard appeals arising out of those two separate legal challenges, providing an ultimate ruling on the very different conclusions in England and Scotland.

The mood music appeared troubling for the government after the judges spent a large portion of their time exploring possible remedies – what they might determine must happen if they find against the prime minister.

The government’s lawyer also came in for forensic questioning, suggesting doubts about the arguments being put forward, and the fact the verdict was delayed from last Thursday also sent alarm bells ringing.

Dominic Grieve, the former Conservative attorney general, said Mr Johnson would have to resign if the Supreme Court determined that he had misled the Queen.

But some observers believe the court might frame its verdict around whether the suspension sought to block the passage of legislation through parliament, which is potentially less explosive.

In a separate interview, Mr Johnson declined to discuss what happens next, saying: “Let’s wait to hear what the justices say.

“I do think it was right for us to have a Queen’s speech, we’ve had the longest period now without a Queen’s speech, the longest parliamentary session since the civil war.”

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