A group of British MPs is planning to invoke a parliamentary procedure last used more than 150 years ago to impeach Prime Minister Tony Blair over the war in Iraq.
Newspaper reports indicate that 11 MPs, mainly Welsh and Scottish nationalists who opposed the war and two Conservatives, want to force Mr Blair to defend himself at Westminster over his decision to go to war.
Although it has almost no chance of success and is likely to be seen as little more than a publicity stunt, the plan will throw the spotlight back on the reasons Mr Blair gave the country for going to war, British newspapers said today.
The impeachment process can be invoked against any person accused of "high crimes and misdemeanours" if a single MP persuades parliament there is a case to answer. It was last used in 1848 and was last successfully invoked almost 200 years ago in 1806.
In 1967 a parliamentary committee recommended the right to impeach should be abandoned as "the circumstances in which impeachment has taken place are now so remote from the present that the procedure may be considered obsolete".
However, the right was never repealed.
The 11 MPs said they wanted to use the power because they believed Blair acted dishonestly in taking Britain to war by overstating the threat posed by Iraq.
The backlash over Iraq has seen Mr Blair's trust rating plummet, and although opinion polls say he is on course to win a third general election expected next year, opponents hope to use the issue to question his credibility.
A top-level inquiry in July cleared Mr Blair of tricking Britain into war but did criticise him for relying on deeply flawed pre-war intelligence.