Daily Mail

Boris: I won’t be forced out

He’ll refuse to quit even if he loses vote of no confidence

- By Jack Doyle and David Churchill

BORIS Johnson would refuse to quit No 10 if he lost a confidence vote in the Commons and will instead force through a No Deal Brexit, it emerged last night.

Labour is already plotting to join forces with Tory rebels to try to collapse the Government and replace Mr Johnson as Prime Minister if he pursues a No Deal departure from the European Union on October 31.

But allies say Mr Johnson would stay in office even if he lost a confidence vote – and trigger a general election to take place after the Brexit date so the UK would leave the EU automatica­lly during the campaign.

Constituti­onal experts said Mr Johnson is not legally compelled to leave No 10 even if the Commons passes a no confidence motion. However, if he did refuse to follow ‘constituti­onal precedent’ it would spark a crisis that could drag the Queen into Brexit politics. Details of Downing Street’s approach emerged from comments made by his senior aide, Dominic Cummings, who is said to have ‘laughed’ at the idea that his boss would walk away in response to a confidence vote. The revelation came as:

EU states were told to ramp up No Deal preparatio­n in response to fears it is now the default option;

No 10 said any agreement containing the ‘ anti- democratic’ backstop would not pass a vote in Parliament;

Mr Johnson said a general election was ‘the last thing I want’;

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said he did not believe the Commons was able to stop No Deal;

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn indicated he would call a confidence vote within days of MPs returning to Parliament in September after the summer recess;

It emerged that draft laws on immigratio­n, trade, fishing and agricultur­e after Brexit would not be put before the Commons, to stop them being hijacked by anti-No Deal MPs.

Yesterday Mr Johnson’s spokesman said the UK will leave the EU on October 31 by ‘any means necessary’. But aides are braced for rebel Tory MPs, led by former attorney general Dominic Grieve, to try ‘every trick in the book’ to stop No Deal when they return in September. The nuclear option is to order a confidence vote under the Fixed-Term Parliament­s Act.

Mr Grieve is said to believe that if he can win the vote, Mr Johnson would be forced to leave office. MPs could then install a prime minister who would extend Article 50, preventing No Deal. However, when this propositio­n was put to Mr Cummings – the mastermind behind the Vote Leave campaign – he was dismissive. ‘Someone put Grieve’s idea to Cummings that if we lose a vote of no confidence the PM will have to resign. He spat out his drink laughing,’ a No 10 official told the Financial Times.

Last night Mr Grieve hit back, accusing Mr Cummings of ‘characteri­stic arrogance and ignorance’. He insisted No Deal could be stopped if MPs voted to set up a ‘government of national unity’.

Speaking to Sky News from his home in Brittany, France, he said: ‘I don’t think Mr Cummings understand­s how the Fixed-Term Parliament­s Act works. The Act doesn’t necessaril­y mean if there is a no confidence vote it leads inevitably to an election. Not at all.’

He said the Commons would have 14 days to form a new administra­tion ‘and there’s nothing the current Prime Minister can do to stop such an administra­tion being formed.’

Catherine Haddon, of the Institute For Government think-tank, said: ‘If Parliament passed a motion saying we have no confidence in the Prime Minister and wish a government to be formed under whoever, that would put the Queen under enormous pressure to say, “I think you should resign because the Commons has confidence in another individual”. But the Queen wants to stay out of politics, so she wouldn’t want to do that.’

A senior Downing Street source said: ‘This Government will use any means necessary to deliver Brexit on October 31.’

Speaking on a visit to Boston, Lincolnshi­re, Mr Johnson was asked if he was preparing to fight an election. He said: ‘The answer is no. The people of the UK voted in the election in 2015, they had a referendum in 2016 and another election in 2017. They want us to deliver what they asked for – and that is for us to leave the EU.

‘The last thing I want to do is call another election.’

‘He spat out his drink laughing’

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