British PM Urged to Quell Brexit Ruling Backlash


TEHRAN (Tasnim) – British Prime Minister Theresa May was urged Saturday to try to quell the furor sparked by a High Court ruling that she needs parliamentary approval before triggering Britain's exit from the EU.

Former ministers called on her to address the angry backlash after three senior judges upheld a challenge to her right to start the departure process without MPs having their say first.

May spent Friday trying to assure European leaders that Thursday's verdict would not affect her timetable for triggering Article 50, the formal procedure for leaving the European Union.

But on the domestic front, members of her governing center-right Conservative Party and pro-Brexit newspapers were raging about the ruling, fearing it could derail the process.

Bob Neill, the chairman of parliament's scrutiny committee on justice affairs, said the attacks were "threatening the independence of our judiciary", as he urged May to intervene.

"Some of the things which have been said about the court's judgement by politicians have been utterly disgraceful," the Conservative said, AFP reported.

May and her government "must now make clear that the independence of the judiciary is fundamental to our democracy. You have to respect that even if you think they have got a decision wrong", he said.

Ex-minister Anna Soubry, a prominent Remain campaigner, said that some media coverage was "inciting hatred".

"What message are we sending out to the rest of the world? Probably that this nation is in grave danger of losing the plot -- and I think we might have done."

The Daily Mail, which branded the judges "enemies of the people", said Saturday it was an "anti-democratic ruling", as other newspapers kept up the heat.

Opposition Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn was expected to call on May to set out her Brexit negotiating strategy in parliament "without delay" in the wake of the High Court ruling.

"There must be transparency and accountability to parliament about the government's plans," he was to say to a think tank in London Saturday, according to pre-released extracts of the speech.

"I suspect the government opposes democratic scrutiny of its plans because -- frankly -- there aren't any plans, beyond the hollow rhetoric of 'Brexit means Brexit'."

On Friday, May telephoned European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, European Council President Donald Tusk, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande.

She told them the government still intended to invoke Article 50 between the New Year and the end of March, and that she was confident of winning a Supreme Court appeal against Thursday's ruling.

The High Court decision raises the prospect of a protracted parliamentary debate, although EU leaders have urged a swift departure.

In a sign of the likely parliamentary storms ahead, pro-Brexit Conservative lawmaker Stephen Phillips resigned as an MP Friday, citing "irreconcilable policy differences with the current government".

He said "quitter" was a label he could live with, but "Conservative no longer is".

The resignation leaves May's government with a slim working majority of 14 in the 650-member House of Commons.

It also fueled speculation of an early general election, though Downing Street maintains that polls should not be brought forward from 2020.

Meanwhile, the White House urged Britain and the EU to "continue to be flexible and work this out in a process that is smooth, pragmatic, transparent and productive" following the court ruling.