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posted by on Wednesday January 25 2017, @05:31PM   Printer-friendly
from the we've-always-been-at-war-with-eurasia dept.

The UK Supreme Court has ruled that Parliament must vote on and approve of invoking Article 50 which triggers arrangements for leaving the European Union:

The Supreme Court has dismissed the government's appeal in a landmark case about Brexit, meaning Parliament will be required to give its approval before official talks on leaving the EU can begin. The ruling is a significant, although not totally unexpected, setback for Theresa May.

[...] The highest court in England and Wales has dismissed the government's argument that it has the power to begin official Brexit negotiations with the rest of the EU without Parliament's prior agreement. By a margin of eight to three, the 11 justices upheld November's High Court ruling which stated that it would be unlawful for the government to rely on executive powers known as the royal prerogative to implement the outcome of last year's referendum.

Also at NYT, WSJ, and The Guardian.

Previously: Brexit Court Defeat for UK Government


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  • (Score: 2) by n1 on Thursday January 26 2017, @02:38AM

    by n1 (993) on Thursday January 26 2017, @02:38AM (#458785) Journal

    I agree with the majority of your post, but the NHS is going to be bait and switched, more and more 'small charges' and 'private sector competition' will be added... and in the Tory voter crowd, it will be seen as a necessity brought on by 'the immigrants' and the breadth of services now offered by the NHS -- which if you believe the dailymail, 90% of NHS budget goes on cosmetic surgery for benefit scroungers and delivering anchor babies for illegal immigrants -- so they'll be supporting privatization and a transition to insurance by the back door, obviously pensioners will be excluded from the upfront costs for the most part. The rest of us are used to paying for certain things already, be it prescriptions, NHS dentists, a letter from the doctor for your employer, it's going to be incremental so we won't really notice and we can still blame the lower social classes for overburdening the system. Some are very supportive of removing the NHS facilities because of 'lifestyle choices' as it is...

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