This past week in the House of Lords there was a debate on the Judicial Review and Courts Bill that I wrote about last year. Clause one would insert a new section 29A into the Senior Courts Act 1981 that would, in turn, grant new powers to the courts in relation to quashing orders. As the relevant minister, Lord Wolfson, pointed out during the debate, “[s]uspending a quashing order means that courts can, when appropriate, allow a decision-maker to make a new decision before the unlawful act is quashed, or put in place transitional arrangements”.
Surely any reasonable person would have forseen that the rhetoric of Brexitism namely that "We" would take back our sovereignty, would mean exactly what we are now faced with. That is "We" have taken sovereignty and "we" have lost it.
Surely any reasonable person would have forseen that the rhetoric of Brexitism namely that "We" would take back our sovereignty, would mean exactly what we are now faced with. That is "We" have taken sovereignty and "we" have lost it.