A LOONY-Left Labour MP called for the monarchy to be ABOLISHED after Boris Johnson got the Queen to suspend Parliament.
Kate Osamor said Her Majesty should remember what happened to her cousin — King Constantine of Greece — when he was forced out after “enabling a right-wing coup” in the 1970s.
The Edmonton MP – who quit Jeremy Corbyn’s Cabinet after lying about her drug dealer son – fumed on Twitter: “The Queen should look at what happened to her cousin Tino ex King of Greece when you enable a right wing coup! Monarchy abolished!”
After the Queen approved Boris’s request to prorogue Parliament, Osamor tweeted: “The. Queen. Did. Not. Save. Us.”
Osamor, ex-shadow International Development Secretary, came under fire last year after it emerged her son Ishmael, then 29, was caught with £2,500 worth of MDMA, cocaine, ketamine and cannabis at Bestival in Dorset in 2019.
He was let off with a community sentence but kept his £50,000-a-year taxpayer funded job working for his mother.
The leftie-MP claimed she knew nothing about her son’s drugs case until his sentencing in October at Bournemouth crown court.
When confronted by a Times reporter, she allegedly threatened to “smash his face in with a bat”, threw a bucket of water over him and accused him of stalking her.
The Queen should look at what happened to her cousin Tino ex King of Greece when you enable a right wing coup! Monarchy abolished!
Kate Osamor MP
But Osamor was not the only hysterical Remainer in uproar at the PM’s move yesterday, fellow Corbynista Clive Lewis insisted police would need to drag him out of Parliament if the PM succeeds in shutting down the Commons.
He said: “I and other MPs will defend democracy. We will call on people to take to the streets.”
And Lloyd Russell Moyle MP demanded a General Strike.
He told the Mirror: “It looks more and more like the only way forward to stop our country falling into the hands of the undemocratic right”
Yesterday Her Majesty met with members of Privy Council, including Brexiteer Jacob Rees-Mogg, in Balmoral and the suspension – to take place between September 9 to October 14 – was given the green light.
Boris’ bold move to block MPs from sitting in Parliament for around five weeks over conference season will give Remainers less time to launch new plots to stop us leaving on October 31.
MPs would come back for a Queen’s Speech on October 14 under the plans, just two weeks before we’re due to leave the EU.
That would leave just days for a possible vote of no confidence in Boris, or for rebel MPs to pass a law to push back the Brexit date.
The anti-Brexit petitioners claim Parliament “must not be prorogued or dissolved unless and until the Article 50 period has been sufficiently extended or the UK’s intention to withdraw from the EU has been cancelled”.
Legal challenges against Mr Johnson’s decision are mounting, with separate bids launched in London and Edinburgh courts seeking an emergency injunction to prevent Parliament being suspended.
BORIS Johnson has announced he will prorogue – or suspend – Parliament from the middle of September until just a few weeks before the Brexit deadline of October 31.
Remainers are furious at the PM’s move because it means they have a very short amount of time to mount a credible legal challenge against No Deal.
Proroguing sees the end of a parliamentary session – no matter what is being debated.
If the Commons is dissolved any bill that is currently being discussed or has not been properly answered will not progress.
MPs are currently in recess – meaning Parliament isn’t sitting – which makes it harder for Remainers to push through anti-Brexit legislation or use obscure Parliamentary tricks to block our divorce from Brussels.
This means Boris could send MPs away and stop them holding up Brexit.
The PM has also announced that a Queen’s Speech – which marks the opening of a session of Parliament – will be held on October 14.
The speech is a list of laws the government plans to get approved over the year – for Boris this could include a number of policy changes he hopes will win him voters in the case of an election.
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