I know it's the Guardian again, but where else are these questions being addressed?
On Tuesday is the Supreme Court in London going to effetively topple the PM Boris Johnson by following the Scottish Appeal Court and pronouncing that Johnson's proroging of parliment was unlawful? I have my doubts. Do the judges lean towards the executive, and executive without a majority, one with far less than a majority, or will they lean towards the legislature the Commons which is attempting to rein in the Executive?
Does parliamentary democracy, as we've understood it, cease to exist after Tuesday if Boris Johnson survives the Supreme Court and then goes on to ignore parliament because he's shut it down and no one can stop him from leading Britain out of the EU in time? Then, the UK, for a time, stops being a real parliamentary democracy and lurches into uncharted waters, becoming something else, becoming a country ruled by Boris Johnson on his own. What happens then? Are the remainers just expected to sit back and let him rule like this? If he, without a majority behind him or a real electoral mandate can break the rules and act unlawfully, what about the rest of us and other powerful actors? What kind of a dangerous precedent is he setting for the future? And when Brexit is revealed as total sham and a deluded mirage, how will people react and who gets the blame and how are the leaders held to account?