On Thursday morning, the high court ruled that parliament – and not the prime minister by use of prerogative powers – would need to trigger Article 50 to start the UK’s exit from the European Union.
On Thursday evening, a portion of the British media exercised its own prerogative: to attack the judges behind the ruling.
Some lawyers and legal experts thought “enemies of the people” was perhaps a little over the top:
Others homed in on the finer detail:
How about that fencing, though?
The Telegraph also pits the judges against “the people” and turns them blue, to hammer home an unspecified point:
There are, though, reasons beyond the fact that they’re silly to object to headlines like these:
Mind you, Kelemen is professor of political science and Jean Monnet chair in European Union politics at Rutgers University, New Jersey, and sounds suspiciously like one of those “experts”. As does this Bagehot chap:
Telegraph columnist (but pro-Remainer) Mary Riddell appears to be giving Friday’s edition a miss:
Meanwhile, over in Daily Express-land:
Spare your pinch-zoom fingers; here’s that first paragraph:
Today this country faces a crisis as grave as anything since the dark days when Churchill vowed we would fight them on the beaches.
It’s not just as bad as the second world war, though, as the Express goes on:
Truly, November 3 2016 was the day democracy died.
Onward to dystopia then:
By contrast, the Sun’s take is fairly tame, plumping for the cosy familiarity of foreigners, elites and a blink-and-that’ll-be-funnier-than-actually-seeing-it pun. It’s almost as if they don’t genuinely believe that Brexit has been blocked after all.
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