Daily Mail

PLOTTERS DITHER IN BID TO OUST PM

÷They can’t agree on plan ÷Emergency talks today ÷Mogg blasts Bercow antics

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

ANTI-BREXIT MPs were last night dithering over whether to try to bring down Boris Johnson during this week’s Tory conference.

Labour, the scottish National Party and the Lib Dems will hold emergency talks in London today with a rag-bag of independen­t MPs to decide on their next step in frustratin­g a No Deal Brexit.

Ministers are on standby to travel back to London from the conference in Manchester if an attempt is made to topple the PM.

They fear speaker John Bercow will allow MPs free rein to try to hobble Mr Johnson’s efforts to get an EU deal in the hope of eventually cancelling Brexit altogether.

Under one proposal being considered, MPs could change the law to allow the Commons speaker to stand in for the Prime Minister and request another delay from Brussels.

Commons Leader Jacob rees-Mogg yesterday savaged Mr Bercow, saying his recent conduct had ‘damaged the standing of the House of Commons in the eyes of the British public to the lowest point in modern history’. But last night the prospect of a formal vote of no-confidence appeared to be fading as members of the so- called remain Alliance squabbled over who should replace Mr Johnson if he is ousted. The row came as:

Mr Johnson came out fighting over the latest sleaze allegation­s, with No 10 denying claims by journalist Charlotte Edwardes that he squeezed her thigh 20 years ago;

Downing street warned that the Government had as few as ten days to strike a Brexit deal, but insisted it was still possible;

it emerged that the Prime Minister apologised to the Queen last week after the supreme Court ruled his advice to her to suspend Parliament was unlawful;

He said he had been a ‘model of restraint’ as he defended his descriptio­n of anti-No Deal legislatio­n as the ‘surrender Act’;

it was reported that No 10 is investigat­ing claims that MPs behind the so-called surrender Act received help drafting the legislatio­n from the EU and French government.

SNP Westminste­r leader ian Blackford urged opposition parties to unite and bring down the Government this week to install a caretaker premier who would delay Brexit and avoid a No Deal departure at the end of next month. He said it was not enough to ‘sit back and hope Boris Johnson doesn’t allow us to crash out without a deal’, adding: ‘We do not believe Johnson is going to extend Article 50 – and we won’t risk time running out.’

But the Lib Dems warned they would only back a vote of no-confidence if Jeremy Corbyn stepped aside and allowed a less divisive figure, such as Labour grandee Dame Margaret Beckett, to take charge of a so-called ‘government of national unity’.

And Labour appeared to be getting cold feet. Education spokesman Angela rayner said Labour would not support a vote until after a new law kicked in next month requiring Mr Johnson to seek another Brexit delay.

she added: ‘We want to make sure we get No Deal off the table before we do anything else.’ The Lib Dems and independen­t MPs have made it clear they will not install Mr Corbyn at No 10 and are pushing for a compromise.

Dame Margaret is the favourite, but others being canvassed include Tory former chancellor Kenneth Clarke, ex-Labour deputy leader Harriet Harman and Tory former home secretary Amber rudd.

Mr rees-Mogg condemned the plot as a ‘remoaner coup’. And Mr Johnson mocked the plotters, who went to the supreme Court to secure their right to hold the Government to account on Brexit but now seem unsure what to do. Commenting on last week’s toxic events in the Commons, he said: ‘Parliament made a huge effort to come back early to debate Brexit. Fine.

‘But did you actually hear anything ... which advanced the store of human knowledge about Brexit? Absolutely not.’ Pressed on the threat of a no-confidence vote, he said the Government had already offered to set aside parliament­ary time for a vote to trigger an election, only for Mr Corbyn to refuse.

if pro-remain MPs pull back from a formal vote of no-confidence they will consider alternativ­es to unsettle the PM, with Plaid Cymru pushing for formal impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Mr Johnson.

And today’s meeting of opposition leaders could see the Lib Dems pushing to bring forward the date when Mr Johnson has to legally ask Brussels to extend Article 50 to saturday – as the current october 19 deadline would not leave enough time for a court case if Mr Johnson tries not to obey.

‘Model of restraint’

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