Toronto Star

Johnson’s handle on Brexit slipping

House of Lords says PM needs deal to leave EU; call for election refused

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON— Britain’s bedeviling Brexit dilemma intensifie­d Friday as opposition parties refused to support Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s call for an election until he secures a delay to Britain’s exit from the European Union — something he vows he’ll never do.

Johnson insists Britain must leave the EU in 55 days and says an election is the only way to break the deadlock that has seen lawmakers repeatedly reject the divorce deal on offer, but also block attempts to leave the EU without one.

He wants to go to the public on Oct. 15, two weeks before the scheduled Brexit day of Oct. 31, but needs the support of twothirds of lawmakers to trigger a snap election.

Johnson lost a vote on the same question this week, but he plans to try again Monday.

After discussion­s Friday, lawmakers from several opposition parties said they would not back an election unless the government asked the EU to postpone Brexit, removing the risk the U.K. could crash out without a deal. Johnson says he would “rather be dead in a ditch” than delay Brexit.

Parliament is trying to force his hand, passing an opposition-backed law that would compel Johnson’s Conservati­ve government to seek a three-month Brexit postponeme­nt if no divorce deal is agreed by Oct. 19.

The legislatio­n was approved Friday by the unelected House of Lords, after gaining backing from the elected House of Commons this week. It will become law within days once it gets the formality of royal assent.

But pro-EU lawmakers want to hold off on triggering an election until the Brexit delay has actually been secured, fearing Johnson will try to wriggle out of the commitment.

“I do not trust the prime minister to do his duty,” said Liz Saville Roberts, leader in Parliament of the Welsh Plaid Cymru.

She said lawmakers needed to be sitting in Parliament in late October, rather than on the election campaign trail, to ensure Britain does not crash out of the EU. That makes an election before November unlikely.

Blocking an election is a risky strategy for the opposition, which could be accused of denying the public its say.

The Conservati­ve Party on Friday tweeted a mocked-up image of Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn in a chicken suit, and Johnson said he had “never known an opposition in the history of democracy that’s refused to have an election.”

“I think obviously they don’t trust the people, they don’t think that the people will vote for them, so they’re refusing to have an election,” he said.

Scottish National Party Leader Nicola Sturgeon tweeted: “An early general election is now a question of ‘when’ not ‘if’ — but Johnson mustn’t be allowed to dictate the timing as a device to avoid scrutiny and force through a ‘no deal’ Brexit.”

Johnson’s options are unclear if he loses Monday’s vote. He could call a no-confidence vote in his own government, which would only need a simple majority to pass. He could try to change the law that governs how elections can be triggered. He could even resign.

In short, it’s a complicate­d mess.

After only six weeks in office, his plans are in crisis. The EU refuses to renegotiat­e the deal it struck with his predecesso­r Theresa May, which has been rejected three times by Parliament.

Johnson insists he wants to secure a divorce deal, and his chief Brexit negotiator, David Frost, was in Brussels on Friday for talks with EU officials. But the bloc says Britain has made no concrete proposals for changes to May’s rejected deal.

EU officials say it seems increasing­ly likely Britain will depart without an agreement.

“The situation in Britain is quite a mess now and we don’t know what is happening there,” said Finnish Prime Minister Antti Rinne, whose country currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency.

“It seems very obvious that we are not getting Brexit with an agreement,” he said.

 ?? ANDREW MILLIGAN AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? British Prime Minister Boris Johnson tries to steer a bull during a visit to a farm near Aberdeen, Scotland, on Friday. He was in Scotland in campaign mode despite failing to call an early election.
ANDREW MILLIGAN AFP/GETTY IMAGES British Prime Minister Boris Johnson tries to steer a bull during a visit to a farm near Aberdeen, Scotland, on Friday. He was in Scotland in campaign mode despite failing to call an early election.

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