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Abstract:The UK government's legal chief says Johnson's government will not break a law passed by opposition members of Parliament to delay Brexit.
The UK government will not break the law forcing them to delay Brexit, the justice secretary says.
Members of Parliament passed an act earlier this month designed to force Prime Minister Boris Johnson to seek a fresh delay if he fails to ratify a Brexit deal by the middle of October.
However, Johnson has insisted there are “no circumstances” under which he will delay Brexit.
Justice Secretary Robert Buckland dismissed suggestions Johnson would break the law.
“That is not what we are about that is not what we will do,” he said.
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Boris Johnson could be forced to delay Brexit, despite repeatedly insisting that he won't, the United Kingdom's justice secretary has said.
Opposition members of Parliament passed a new law earlier this month which is designed to force the prime minister to seek another delay to Brexit, if he has failed to ratify a deal with the European Union by the middle of October.
Following its passage, Johnson insisted there were “no circumstances” in which he would request an extension to Article 50, adding that he would rather be “dead in a ditch” than accept another delay.
Other ministers, including Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, have suggested that there may be loopholes in the law which would allow the UK government to avoid seeking an extension.
Read more: Boris Johnson pulls out of Luxembourg press conference because of deafening boos from protesters
Read more: Boris Johnson could soon be forced to resign as prime minister and make way for Jeremy Corbyn
Senior government sources have also reportedly suggested that the prime minister would simply refuse to follow the law.
However, Johnson's Lord Chancellor and Justice Secretary Robert Buckland, on Tuesday told Sky News that the government could have little choice but to accept a delay if it were offered.
He said the law has the effect of “forcing the British government to accept an extension if it is offered one” and that “this government is not about breaking the law.”
Buckland described Raab's comment that the law was “flawed” as being political “commentary.”
“It is entirely appropriate for colleagues to argue and analyse what this act of parliament means but that is very different from countenancing breaking the rule of law,” he said.
“That is not what we are about that is not what we will do.”
Buckland intervenes again
This is the second time that Buckland has intervened to insist that the UK government will not break the law.
Following newspaper reports earlier this month that he was on the brink of resigning over Johnson's threats to break the law on a Brexit delay, Buckland tweeted that he warned the prime minister against such a move.
“Speculation about my future is wide of the mark. I fully support the Prime Minister and will continue to serve in his Cabinet,” he tweeted.
“We have spoken over the past 24 hours regarding the importance of the Rule of Law, which I as Lord Chancellor have taken an oath to uphold.”
The UK Supreme Court will sit on Tuesday for the first day of a case on whether Johnson acted illegally by suspending parliament earlier this month. The verdict is expected on Thursday.
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