Prime Minister Boris Johnson is struggling to get parliament to agree to his demand for an early election (AFP Photo/ISABEL INFANTES) |
London (AFP) - British MPs on Monday defeated yet another attempt by Prime Minister Boris Johnson to force an early election, just hours after the European Union agreed to postpone Brexit for up to three months.
The
Conservative leader immediately announced an alternative plan to hold a snap
poll that could yet see an election in early December.
Johnson
suffered a major setback earlier Monday when he was forced to agree to delay
Britain's departure from the European Union beyond this week's October 31
deadline.
He had
previously said he would rather be "dead in a ditch" than extend the
tortuous Brexit process started by the 2016 EU referendum.
But he was
forced by law to ask EU leaders for what is the third postponement, after MPs
refused to endorse the divorce terms he struck with Brussels earlier this
month.
Ambassadors
from the other 27 EU member states agreed to the request on Monday but proposed
that Britain could leave earlier if the deal is ratified.
Johnson
sought to regain the initiative by calling an election for December 12, with a
plan to persuade MPs to back his agreement before then.
His initial
proposal was defeated late Monday in the 650-seat House of Commons, as he
failed to muster the required two-thirds majority.
But he
immediately put forward a second plan to legislate for a poll on December 12 --
which would require only a simple majority to pass.
"This
house cannot any longer keep this country hostage," Johnson told MPs.
He added:
"We have a great new (Brexit) deal, and it's time for voters to have a
chance to pronounce on that deal and to replace this dysfunctional parliament
with a new parliament that can get Brexit done."
Flextension
The EU's
approval came just three days before the latest Brexit deadline, a decision
held up by scepticism in France about giving yet more time to a deeply divided
British parliament.
"The
EU27 has agreed that it will accept the UK's request for a Brexit flextension
until 31 January 2020," European Council President Donald Tusk said.
Johnson
accepted the offer in a letter to Tusk and other EU leaders a few hours later,
but made clear his reluctance.
He urged EU
members states "to make clear that a further extension after January 31 is
not possible. This is plenty of time to ratify our deal".
Brexit has
now been delayed three times from the original planned date of
March 29 (AFP
Photo/Gal ROMA)
|
According
to a copy of the agreement seen by AFP, if Johnson convinces MPs to approve an
amicable divorce accord in the coming weeks, Brexit could be on November 30 or
December 31.
This is not
impossible -- MPs last week backed Johnson's deal in principle but refused to
rush through its ratification before October 31.
However,
the legislation required to implement the treaty could get bogged down in the
scrutiny process, and some supporters could yet change their minds.
In the
meantime, the EU text says London must nominate a senior official to serve on
the next European Commission and must agree not to try to reopen the divorce
agreement.
After
London gave its formal approval, Tusk will ask the EU capitals to sign off on
it, likely on Tuesday or Wednesday.
Election
wrangling
More than
three years after Britons voted 52-48 percent for Brexit in a 2016 referendum
the country and parliament remain deeply divided over when, how and even
whether to leave the EU.
Johnson has
tried twice before to force an election to break the political impasse.
The main
opposition Labour party dislikes Johnson's Brexit deal and says it will not
back an election until his threat of leaving the EU with no deal at all is
removed.
"This
is a prime minister who cannot be trusted," Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn
told parliament. "Every promise this prime minister makes he
abandons."
Some MPs
fear that if the deal does not pass parliament, Johnson might delay an election
until February, risking a "no deal" exit that many fear would cause
huge economic disruption.
After
losing Monday's vote, the premier announced he would introduce a bill on
Tuesday to legislate for an election, which would enshrine a date in law.
Two smaller
parties, the Scottish National Party and the Liberal Democrats, had earlier
offered their own similar bill for a December 9 election.
SNP
Westminster leader Ian Blackford said Johnson's legislation must guarantee that
he will not try to ratify his Brexit deal before any election.
"We
don't trust this prime minister," he said.
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