LONDON — Theresa May's government has been found in contempt of parliament after it refused to comply with a motion passed by MPs demanding that it release the full official legal advice on the prime minister's Brexit deal.
MPs voted by 311 to 293 to find ministers in contempt. It is the first time any UK government has been found in contempt by its MPs in parliamentary history.
The motion, passed Tuesday evening, did not name any individual minister.
However, if May's government continues to refuse to comply with the demands to release the legal advice in full then the Attorney General or other ministers could face suspension from Parliament.
It is a long-standing constitutional convention in the UK that Parliament is sovereign and the executive must be subject to its will. However, the government had argued that a separate convention against revealing confidential legal advice supplied to ministers had precedence.
MPs today rejected that position, as well as a separate motion to have the matter decided by a committee of MPs at a later date. The latter amendment was narrowly rejected by 311 votes to 307.
The decision, which was backed by a nunber of Conservative MPs, spells trouble for May's government as it approaches the crucial vote on the prime minister's Brexit deal due to take place next Tuesday.
More follows...
NOW WATCH: Megyn Kelly in 2017: 'I regret a lot' of the controversial stuff I've said on live television
See Also: