What is Rory Stewart’s ‘alternative parliament’?
Boris Johnson still open to proroguing the Commons - but his former rival is plotting a solution

International Development Secretary Rory Stewart has promised to help create an “alternative parliament” in order to stop a no-deal Brexit if the next prime minister tries to prorogue the Commons in order to bypass MPs’ wishes.
Boris Johnson, the front runner in the race to become the next Tory leader, has suggested that he is still open to the idea of shutting down Parliament, known as proroguing, if MPs fail to back his future plans to leave the European Union.
Stewart - who ran in the leadership race but failed to make it to the final two in voting last month - insists that no deal “does not work” and claims there is not a majority to support the option.
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.

Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
The MP for Penrith and Border says he has the support of David Gauke, Ken Clarke and “most of the people that supported me for the leadership”.
The threat echoes those that Stewart made during his leadership campaign, when he vowed to “bring down” Johnson if he tried to shut out MPs from key decision-making and to “hold our own session of Parliament across the road in Methodist Central Hall”.
This week, the would-be rebel said: “That sounds quite Civil War-ist, but that is what happened in 2002 when Blair tried not to have a vote on the Iraq War. I got into a lot of trouble when I first proposed this, though it’s just a fact that Parliament is not about the building.”
He added that a former speaker, such as Betty Boothroyd, could be enlisted to oversee a parliament sitting in defiance of Johnson, or to use some other “constitutional manoeuvre which means whatever legislation Parliament tries to pass” does not bind his hands, reports The Guardian.
The minister says he will resign as international development secretary if Johnson beats leadership rival Jeremy Hunt to the top job, and that he would then restart his “Rory walks” tour campaign around the country, sharing stories on social media.
Sign up for Today's Best Articles in your inbox
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
-
Having a mayor: Starmer's struggles with devolved leaders
Talking Point Andy Burnham made public criticisms of the Labour government policies without specifically naming Keir Starmer or Rachel Reeves
-
Why is Nasa facing a crisis?
Today's Big Question Trump administration proposes 25% cut to national space agency's budget in 'extinction-level event'
-
The 50-year battle for Western Sahara
The Explainer UK is latest country to back Moroccan plan to end decades-long dispute with Algerian-backed Polisario Front
-
Angela Rayner: Labour's next leader?
Today's Big Question A leaked memo has sparked speculation that the deputy PM is positioning herself as the left-of-centre alternative to Keir Starmer
-
Is Starmer's plan to send migrants overseas Rwanda 2.0?
Today's Big Question Failed asylum seekers could be removed to Balkan nations under new government plans
-
Has Starmer put Britain back on the world stage?
Talking Point UK takes leading role in Europe on Ukraine and Starmer praised as credible 'bridge' with the US under Trump
-
Left on read: Labour's WhatsApp dilemma
Talking Point Andrew Gwynne has been sacked as health minister over messages posted in a Labour WhatsApp group
-
New Year's Honours: why the controversy?
Today's Big Question London Mayor Sadiq Khan and England men's football manager Gareth Southgate have both received a knighthood despite debatable records
-
Is there a Christmas curse on Downing Street?
Today's Big Question Keir Starmer could follow a long line of prime ministers forced to swap festive cheer for the dreaded Christmas crisis
-
John Prescott: was he Labour's last link to the working class?
Today's Big Quesiton 'A total one-off': tributes have poured in for the former deputy PM and trade unionist
-
Last hopes for justice for UK's nuclear test veterans
Under the Radar Thousands of ex-service personnel say their lives have been blighted by aggressive cancers and genetic mutations