KEY POINTS
  • The U.K. Parliament is set to reconvene on Wednesday following a historic ruling defeating Prime Minister Boris Johnson's decision to suspend Parliament in the run up to Brexit.
  • The Supreme Court ruled that it had been unlawful for Johnson's government to suspend (or "prorogue" as the process is formally known) Parliament for five weeks.
  • The eleven judges ruling unanimously that there had been no justification for such an "extreme action."
EU flags flutter on the day of Britain's newly elected prime minister Boris Johnson's debut in the House of Commons, outside the Houses of Parliament in London on July 25, 2019.

The U.K. Parliament is set to reconvene on Wednesday following a historic ruling defeating Prime Minister Boris Johnson's decision to suspend Parliament in the run up to Brexit.

The Supreme Court ruled that it had been unlawful for Johnson's government to suspend (or "prorogue" as the process is formally known) Parliament for five weeks, the eleven judges ruling unanimously that there had been no justification for such an "extreme action."