Johnson’s appeal for snap election rejected

Parliament is rushing through legislation designed to keep Johnson from breaking Britain off from its closest trading partners without a negotiated agreement with Brussels. Internet photo
Parliament is rushing through legislation designed to keep Johnson from breaking Britain off from its closest trading partners without a negotiated agreement with Brussels. Internet photo
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AFP :
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson called Thursday for an early election after a series of votes in parliament tore up his hardline Brexit strategy and left him without a majority.
Johnson will deliver an address in which he “will argue that it is now time for the people to decide after parliament has failed them so we can resolve this once and for all,” a Downing Street spokesman said.
The campaign ramped up despite a vote in parliament on Wednesday in which the main opposition Labour party helped block Johnson’s election push-at least for now.
The timing of a vote still being debated as the country races toward an October 31 departure from the European Union without a plan for what comes next.
The prime minister was dealt a further personal blow when his brother Jo quit his junior ministerial role and said he would not contest his seat in parliament at the next election.
“I’ve been torn between family loyalty and the national interest-it’s an unresolvable tension & time for others to take on my roles,” Jo Johnson tweeted.
Battle lines were drawn across the front pages of British newspapers after a particularly bruising week of UK politics did little to resolve the three-year impasse.
The Labour-backing Daily Mirror branded Johnson “Britain’s worst PM” for threatening a “reckless no-deal Brexit”.
The Daily Mail shot back by calling Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn a “chicken” for refusing on Wednesday to back Johnson’s proposal to hold a general election on October 15.
An opinion poll conducted by YouGov on Monday and Tuesday showed Johnson’s Conservatives leading Labour by 35 to 25 percent.
The pro-European Liberal Democrats were on 16 percent while the Brexit Party of populist Nigel Farage was in fourth place with 11 percent.
Parliament is rushing through legislation designed to keep Johnson from breaking Britain off from its closest trading partners without a negotiated agreement with Brussels.
MPs appeared on course to do so by Monday-a victory that would be accomplished just ahead of five-week shutdown of parliament Johnson controversially ordered at the end of last month.
The pound surged to a one-month high of $1.2347 in Thursday trading on rising market hopes of a chaotic breakup being avoided next month.
The parliamentary bill forces Johnson to seek a three-month Brexit extension until January 31 should an EU summit in Brussels on October 17-18 fail to produce a deal.
It passed the lower House of Commons with the support of 21 rebel Conservative MPs-who were promptly kicked out of the party.
The upper House of Lords ended an all-night filibuster by Johnson’s supporters early on Thursday and agreed to finish voting on the bill by Friday night.
The bill could end up back in the House of Commons on Monday to consider any changes.
It would then go to Queen Elizabeth II for final approval.
Johnson rose to power in July on a pledge to deliver Brexit next month-“deal or no deal”-and refuses to seek a delay.
There is also no guarantee that the other 27 EU leaders will grant one for the third time this year.
“We can see that another six months would not solve the problem,” France’s European Affairs Minister Amelie de Montchalin said on Thursday.
Greens European Parliament leader Philippe Lamberts said after a meeting with EU negotiator on Wednesday: “For all the PM’s bluster about getting a deal, there are no real negotiations going on in Brussels.”
The main debate within Labour and the smaller pro-EU parties is when to schedule Britain’s third general election in four years.
Labour says it will only back the poll once it is sure that Johnson is unable to take Britain out without a deal.
“The problem that we’ve got is that we cannot at the moment have any confidence in Boris Johnson abiding by any commitment or deal that we could construct,” Labour’s finance spokesman John McDonnell told BBC radio.
Labour says it will only back the poll once it is sure that Johnson is unable to take Britain out without a deal.
“The problem that we’ve got is that we cannot at the moment have any confidence in Boris Johnson abiding by any commitment or deal that we could construct,” Labour’s finance spokesman John McDonnell told BBC radio.
“So we’re now consulting on whether it’s better to go long therefore, rather than to go short. And that decision will be taken.”
The prime minister will also face a legal challenge on Thursday against his decision to order the suspension of parliament from next week until October 14.

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