Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

UK PM’S rhetoric leads to outrage

VOTE AGAINST SESSION BREAK

- Prasun Sonwalkar

LONDON: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Thursday faced angry backlash from across the political spectrum and from his own sister following a series of angry exchanges in parliament over Brexit.

Tensions boiled over on Wednesday when a defiant Johnson went on the offensive as MPS returned to work after the Supreme Court ruled as unlawful his move to suspend parliament.

Using words such as “surrender”, “capitulati­on” and “humiliatio­n” to describe the cross-party bill that became law to rule out a no-deal Brexit on October 31, Johnson faced accusation­s of encouragin­g a climate in which several MPS and family members on both sides of the Brexit argument have faced death threats.

He prompted fury by appearing unrepentan­t and describing criticism of his language as “humbug”.

Labour MP Paula Sheriff accused him of inciting hatred towards MPS: “People are really frightened and for him to treat it almost like a joke was horrific.”

His journalist-sister Rachel Johnson said: “I think that is highly reprehensi­ble language to use.” LONDON: British lawmakers voted by 306 to 289 on Thursday against adjourning parliament until October 3 for the governing Conservati­ve Party to hold their annual conference. Usually parliament has a break during the party political conference­s but opposition parties said it should not be adjourned during such a crucial period ahead of the Brexit deadline of October 31.

The real uproar came when Johnson said the best way to honour Jo Cox - an anti-brexit Labour MP who was fatally shot and stabbed by a Nazi sympathise­r during the referendum campaign - would be “to get Brexit done”. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said: “The language that politician­s use matters – it has real consequenc­es.”

Johnson refused to apologise for his belligeren­ce, but told a meeting of his party MPS that he would continue to refer to a bill passed to rule out a no-deal Brexit as a ‘’surrender act”, since, according him, it amounts to surrenderi­ng to the EU.

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