Daily Nation Newspaper

JOHNSON PROMISES BREXIT WITH ‘NO IFS OR BUTS’

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LONDON - Boris Johnson took office as British prime minister yesterday, vowing to implement the result of the 2016 Brexit referendum and lead Britain out of the European Union on October 31 with “no ifs or buts.”

Johnson enters Downing Street at one of the most perilous junctures in post-World War Two British history - the

United Kingdom is divided over its divorce from the EU and weakened by the threeyear political crisis that has gripped it since that referendum.

One of Britain’s most prominent Brexit campaigner­s, Johnson has repeatedly pledged to leave the EU by October 31 - “do or die” - and to inject a new optimism and energy into the divorce, which he argues will bring a host of opportunit­ies.

But his strategy sets the United Kingdom up for a showdown with the EU and thrusts it toward a potential constituti­onal crisis, or an election, at home.

“The people who bet against Britain are going to lose their shirts because we are going to restore trust in our democracy, and we are going to fulfill the repeated promises of parliament to the people and come out of the EU on October 31, no ifs or buts,” Johnson, 55, said after arriving at his new residence, No.10 Downing Street.

One of the issues that prevented his predecesso­r Theresa May getting a divorce deal through parliament was the Irish “backstop” - a provision that would maintain a customs union with the EU if no better solution was found.

Johnson was bullish, however. “Never mind the backstop. The buck stops here,” he said, watched by his girlfriend, Carrie Symonds, and his staff.

He said he would ensure “the people” were his bosses, and that he would accelerate preparatio­ns for a “no-deal” Brexit - the threat he intends to use to force a reluctant EU to renegotiat­e the exit deal it agreed with May.

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