Make the Supreme decision: Boris Johnson's parliamentary suspension was illegal

The Supreme Court has decided that Boris Johnson's directive of the Queen to suspend parliament for five weeks at the height of the Brex crisis was illegal. The trial taken by 11 judges comes after a three-day hearing session last week that exposed fundamental legal differences over the interpretation of the unwritten constitution [...]
The trial taken by 11 judges comes after a three-day hearing session last week that exposed fundamental legal differences on the interpretation of the country's unwritten constitution, reports The Guardian, Pryskopi.
In the Court, it was argued that Prime Minister Johnson for his decision was motivated by “a goal not adequate for” citing the avoidance of parliamentary control over his policies.
Government lawyers told the court that justice should not be introduced into such delicate political areas, which legally was the banned “terresponsive” for them.
Incredibly, neither of the parties guaranteed preliminary copies of the trial because of extreme sensitivity. /Periscope












