Saturday, April 11th, 2026

Suspending Parliament was unlawful, rule judges



AGENCIES: Boris Johnson’s decision to suspend Parliament for five weeks was unlawful, the Supreme Court has ruled.

Judges said it was wrong to stop MPs carrying out duties in the run-up to the Brexit deadline on 31 October.

The PM, who has faced calls to resign, said he “profoundly disagreed” with the ruling but would “respect” it.

The Labour conference finished early following the ruling and MPs are returning to Westminster ready for Parliament to reconvene on Wednesday.

A senior government official said the prime minister spoke to the Queen after the Supreme Court ruling, but would not reveal the details of the conversation.

It comes after the court ruled it was impossible to conclude there had been any reason “let alone a good reason – to advise Her Majesty to prorogue Parliament for five weeks”.

Mr Johnson, who returns to London from New York on Wednesday, also chaired a 30-minute phone call with his cabinet.

A source told the BBC that the Leader of the Commons Jacob Rees-Mogg said to other cabinet ministers on the call that the action by the court had amounted to a “constitutional coup”.

Publish Date : 25 September 2019 05:59 AM

Debate intensifies over reopening the long-dormant Janakpur Cigarette Factory

JANAKPURDHAM: Discussions regarding the revival of the Janakpur Cigarette Factory

Shankar Pokharel slams PM Shah’s silence in Parliament; questions asset disclosures

KATHMANDU: CPN (UML) General Secretary Shankar Pokharel has criticized Prime

Health Ministry launches ‘Hospital Service Reform Procedure 2026’

KATHMANDU: The Ministry of Health and Population has officially implemented

High-stakes US-Iran talks begin in Islamabad amid fragile West Asia ceasefire

ISLAMABAD: Delegations from the United States and Iran are set

Labor permit is the only document needed for migrant workers: DOI

KATHMANDU: The Department of Immigration (DoI) has issued a formal