The Manila Times

EU mulls Johnson’s reluctant Brexit delay request

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LONDON: EU leaders were on Sunday considerin­g a request by Prime Minister Boris Johnson to delay Britain’s departure from the bloc, which he was forced to make after MPs refused to back his Brexit deal.

Johnson has pinned his premiershi­p on getting Britain out of the European Union on October 31, more than three years after the 2016 referendum vote for Brexit.

But the House of Commons on Saturday refused to support a divorce deal he struck with Brussels last week, triggering a law demanding he ask to delay Brexit to avoid the risk of a damaging “no deal” exit.

The Conservati­ve leader duly sent a letter to European Council President Donald Tusk late Saturday asking for the required threemonth delay — but did not sign it.

He sent a second letter — signed — warning that “a further extension would damage the interests of the UK and our EU partners.”

told MPs: “I will not negotiate a delay with the EU.”

Tusk said he would begin consulting EU leaders “on how to react” — a process one diplomat said could take a few days.

Johnson has already spoken to the leaders of France, Germany and the Netherland­s to press his case — and Paris warned Saturday that a Brexit delay was “in nobody’s interest.”

Votes loom next week

In the meantime, Johnson will bring forward legislatio­n that he hopes would neverthele­ss allow Brexit on October 31.

MPs voted to withhold approval for his divorce deal unless and until the legislatio­n required to ratify the treaty is passed through parliament.

The government is seeking a new vote on its deal on Monday, although this may fall foul of parliament­ary procedure.

If it introduces the treaty implementa­tion bill on Monday, however, MPs could be called to vote as early as Tuesday.

Johnson wrote to Tusk that he was “confident” he could get it through before the of the month.

However, the main opposition Labor Party has condemned the deal as a “sell-out,” while Johnson’s Northern Irish allies are opposed to its arrangemen­ts for the province.

‘House of Fools’

Johnson sent the letter to Brussels after a day of high drama in the

Saturday sitting in 37 debate his Brexit deal.

He urged MPs to end years of uncertaint­y that has weighed on the economy and divided the nation — but they refused, warning his deal would leave Britain worse off.

“Why won’t they let us leave?” lamented the Brexit-backing Sunday Express newspaper.

The Mail on Sunday led with the headline “The House of Fools”, warning MPs had “subjected us to yet more agonizing delay.”

The Brexit date has already been pushed back twice, to the fury of those who wanted to chart their own course and abandon the European project after nearly 50 years.

But there was also jubilation

years to at the vote among tens of thousands of protesters who gathered outside parliament on Saturday to demand a new referendum to reverse Brexit.

“That’s really good, that’s one step away from Brexit,” demonstrat­or Philip Dobson told Agence France-Presse.

“Reject Brexit,” “Put It To The People” and “Stop This Madness” read some of the placards at the mass march, where many protest

- ing to leave the EU on October 31 come what may.

But MPs fearful of the risks of a “no deal” departure sought to bind his hands, with a law demanding he delay Brexit if he failed to get an agreement approved by October 19.

The amendment passed Sat

avoid this scenario.

MPs had feared they might pass the Brexit deal but then get bogged down with the laws needed to implement it, risking Britain accidental­ly crashing out of the EU at the end of the month.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Demonstrat­ors hold placards and EU flags as they take part in a march by the People’s Vote organizati­on in central London on October 19, 2019, calling for a final say in a second referendum on Brexit.
AFP PHOTO Demonstrat­ors hold placards and EU flags as they take part in a march by the People’s Vote organizati­on in central London on October 19, 2019, calling for a final say in a second referendum on Brexit.

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