Politics

Marcus Ball loses bid to take legal fight against Boris Johnson to Supreme Court



A campaigner who tried to prosecute Boris Johnson over his EU referendum bus claim has been denied the chance to take his legal fight to the Supreme Court.

Marcus Ball attempted to bring a private prosecution against the Prime Minister over his claim the UK sends £350 million a week to the European Union – which appeared on the side of a bus in the run up to the historic 2016 vote.

The original legal bid was thrown out by the High Court but Mr Ball has appealed.

Lady Justice Rafferty ruled this morning.

The campaigner crowdfunded more than £300,000 online to bring a private prosecution.

He accused the PM of lying because he said that Vote Leave’s most eye-catching claim that “we send the EU £350 million a week” in membership fees to the EU was misleading.

This figure has been widely discredited because it ignored the UK “rebate”, a discount on membership deducted at source.

The application was thrown out on Wednesday by Lady Justice Rafferty – one of the high court judges who quashed the original decision.

In a brief announcement, she said: “This application for leave to appeal to the supreme court is rejected.”

Ball now has the option to apply directly to the supreme court for permission.

Speaking outside court after the ruling, he said: “This isn’t over, we are not giving up.

“We are pursuing it, absolutely.”

Giving reasons for the high court’s ruling in July, Lady Justice Rafferty said the “problem of false statements in the course of political campaigning is not new” and that parliament had enacted laws to deal with “certain false campaign statements which it considers an illegal practice”.

However, she said this did not include false statements relating to publicly available statistics, and found that the district judge’s decision would have “extended the scope” of the offence of misconduct in a public office.

She also said it appeared that “there would have been no complaint” if Johnson had used a figure of “350 million per week gross, or 250 million per week net”.





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