Not really, danny. The one thing that's been notable about the Brexit debate over the last two years is how keen Government has been to see off any and all scrutiny about it. That is why the May government tried, and failed, to defeat the attempt to require Parliament to pass the legislation allowing Notification. That is why Theresa May forced an early election on flimsy excuses. That is why she then attempted, in the 2018 Withdrawal Bill, to stop "meaningful votes" from ever being held, ie to present any withdrawal agreement as a fait accompli. That is why, having been defeated on that point, she then attempted to introduce the same WA (with only some small changes) three times in succession. That is why Johnson decided to prorogue Parliament. That is why he fought the courts over it. And on, and on.
That the Courts, Parliament, the Speaker, etc, are fighting back at this attempt to ram a policy through with zero scrutiny, should come as no surprise. It should even be welcomed. As TTT noted yesterday, Bercow's ruling was both entirely justified and even quite welcome: the government had already been instructed by the House that it should bring forward legislation if it wanted the deal to be approved; trying to get the deal approved after that vote breaks Commons rules, and Bercow was entirely correct to say so. And besides, now the government has introduced that legislation.
It suits some in the Brexit camp to portray any and all scrutiny of the implementation of Brexit as some sort of establishment bias. It is not. No matter the policy, sensible scrutiny and proper process should and must be respected. Just because it suits Johnson's political ends to make him look like the People's Champion doesn't mean we should fall for it.