Politics
2019.09.01 19:38 GMT+8

UK lawmakers opposed to no-deal Brexit to bring forward legislation

Updated 2019.09.01 21:55 GMT+8
CGTN

British lawmakers opposed to no-deal Brexit will attempt to pass a law this week to stop Prime Minister Boris Johnson from allowing Britain to crash out of the EU on October 31, the opposition Labor Party's Brexit spokesman Keir Starmer said. 

Senior minister Michael Gove, however, refused to guarantee the government would abide by any such legislation, saying it needed to see what it said.

Johnson has pledged to deliver Brexit with or without a deal, but opposition lawmakers, and several from his own Conservatives, want to push through legislation to rule out no-deal during a narrow window of opportunity before parliament is suspended in little over a week's time. 

Starmer said the plan, which will be published on Tuesday, had one "very simple" aim: to stop Johnson from taking Britain out of the European Union without a deal. 

"Obviously, if we are at the 31st of October, that will require an extension," he told the BBC on Sunday. 

"But I think this should be a very short, simple exercise designed to ensure we don't crash out without a deal." 

Britain's Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Michael Gove appears to make a statement at Downing Street in London, August 6, 2019. /VCG Photo

Gove, one of Johnson's key ministers who is coordinating no-deal contingency plans, said he believed a majority of lawmakers would back the prime minister and defeat the attempt. 

"We know the prime minister is making progress with our European friends and allies in attempting to secure a deal, and I don't believe that people will want to erect a roadblock in his way," he said. 

David Gauke, a former British justice secretary and a Johnson critic, said he would meet the prime minister on Monday to hear his plan to deliver a Brexit deal he could support. 

David Gauke, U.K. justice secretary, arrives for a meeting of cabinet ministers at number 10 Downing Street in London, July 23, 2019. /VCG Photo

But he said he was prepared to disobey Conservative Party discipline and lose the whip if he was not persuaded. 

"Sometimes there is a point where you have to judge between your own personal interests and the national interest, and the national interest has to come first," he told Sky News. "But I hope it doesn't come to that." 

Johnson told the Sunday Times that those backing the opposition to no-deal risked there being no Brexit at all. 

"Are you going to side with those who want to scrub the democratic verdict of the people – and plunge this country into chaos?" he said. "Or are you going to side with those of us who want to get on, deliver on the mandate of the people and focus with absolute, laser-like precision on the domestic agenda? That's the choice." 

Source(s): Reuters
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