News

Petition not to suspend Parliament to be debated on Monday after 1.7m signatures

An online petition calling for the Government not to suspend Parliament will be debated on Monday.

The e-petition has more than 1.7 million signatures and will go before the petitions committee.

A separate, pro-prorogation petition, will also be debated by the committee.

The second appeal, which asks that “the Prime Minister advise Her Majesty the Queen to prorogue parliament” to “prevent any attempts by parliamentarians to thwart Brexit”, has more than 100,000 signatures.

The pro-prorogation appeal was launched back in February, and on March 18 the Government responded and said: “The Government has no plans to prorogue parliament and remains committed to delivering an orderly exit from the EU in line with its pledge to deliver on the outcome of the referendum.”

The petition against suspending parliament gained 100,000 signatures in just a few hours. Signatures continued to climb despite the Queen approving an order last week to suspend parliament no earlier than September 9 and no later than September 12, until October 14.

Protesters from Another Europe is Possible outside the Houses of Parliament (PA)

Thousands joined protests across the UK within hours of the move being announced.

Critics, including Commons Speaker John Bercow, called the decision a “constitutional outrage”, designed to stop MPs from intervening as the UK heads towards a no-deal Brexit on October 31.

But the protests were dismissed as “phoney” by Commons Leader Jacob Rees-Mogg.

@BenGelblum

READ MORE: Petition not to suspend Parliament to be debated on Monday after 1.7m signatures

Pound actually goes back up as Boris Johnson loses his majority

Johnson’s Brexit negotiation team less than a quarter of May’s

Boris Johnson agreed to suspend parliament two weeks before he denied the plan existed

Race hate monitor reveals ‘significant spike’ in anti-muslim incidents from Boris Johnson’s comments

Boris Johnson calls Corbyn a “chlorinated chicken” and a “great big girl’s blouse” as leaders clash

Ben Gelblum

Contributing & Investigations Editor & Director of Growth wears glasses and curly hair cool ideas to: ben.gelblum (at) thelondoneconomic.com @BenGelblum

Published by