Archie Gemmill Goal
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- Nov 18, 2015
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OK, so if the court has the authority to adjudicate on proroguing, that means proroguing is a law, not a parliamentary procedure.
From the House of Commons Library website;
https://commonslibrary.parliament.u...preme-court-on-the-prorogation-of-parliament/
"On 11 September, the High Court of England and Wales held that the legality of the prorogation was not justiciable in a court of law. That meant that the High Court had determined the question to be beyond the scope of judicial review. On the same day, the Court of Session in Scotland reached the opposite conclusion. It determined that the issue was justiciable."
That disagreement is why it went to the Supreme Court. The SC ruled in favour of the Scottish Court of Session;
"The Court held that the power to prorogue Parliament is a prerogative power: “a power recognised by the common law and exercised by the Crown… on advice” of the Prime Minister."
From the judgement itself;
https://www.supremecourt.uk/cases/docs/uksc-2019-0192-judgment.pdf
"30.Before considering the question of justiciability, there are four points that we should make clear at the outset. First, the power to order the prorogation of Parliament is a prerogative power: that is to say, a power recognised by the common law and exercised by the Crown."
Prorogation is a common law.
Some of this seems.confused. the english and scottish cases were two seperate things. its not right to frame it as the SC deciding which one was right.