UK’s Johnson defeated in key parliamentary vote on Brexit

Britain’s Parliament was attempting to defy Prime
Minister Boris Johnson’s Brexit plans on Wednesday as lawmakers sought a way
out of the impasse that has gripped the nation since the 2016 vote to leave the
European Union.
The House of Commons was set to confront Johnson
over his insistence that the U.K. leave the EU on Oct. 31 even without a
withdrawal agreement to cushion the economic blow. Opposition lawmakers,
supported by rebels in Johnson’s Conservative Party, planned to fast-track a
law that would block a no-deal departure, amid cries from lawmakers that it
would cause irreparable harm.
“To deliver Brexit like this is to create a poison
pill which for 40 years will divide this country straight down the middle,”
former Conservative Party leadership candidate Rory Stewart told the BBC. “If
you are going to deliver Brexit at all, try to do it legally, constitutionally
and with consent.”
Johnson accused his opponents of undermining the
government’s attempt to strike a new divorce deal with the EU, and said he
would seek a general election if the lawmakers succeed this week, taking his
message directly to the people in his bid to deliver Brexit come what may.
On Wednesday Johnson said the opposition’s
“surrender bill” would “wreck any chance” of Britain concluding successful
negotiations with the EU.
He said that if the bill passed he would call for “a
general election on October 15.”
But it is unclear whether Johnson has the votes to
trigger an election, which needs the approval of two-thirds of the 650 House of
Commons lawmakers.
The main opposition Labour Party said it would
oppose an election until legislation is in place to block a no-deal Brexit. The
party’s spokesman on Brexit issues, Keir Starmer, said Johnson had violated the
trust of the House of Commons with his decision last week to suspend Parliament
for several weeks before the Brexit deadline.
Johnson needs the support of Labour to win
Parliament’s backing for an election.
“He has zero trust, because I’m afraid he has been
dishonest time and again,” Starmer told the BBC.
While Johnson insists that talks with the EU are
“making substantial progress,” the bloc says the U.K. has not submitted any
substantial new proposals.
Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn accused Johnson of
frittering away time until a no-deal Brexit became inevitable.
“These negotiations are a sham. All he is doing is
running down the clock,” Corbyn told lawmakers in the House of Commons.
On Tuesday, Johnson lost his first vote in
Parliament since becoming prime minister in July, as lawmakers passed a motion
enabling their push for a law stopping a no-deal Brexit. His government lost
its working majority as one Conservative lawmaker defected to the opposition,
and more than 20 Tory legislators sided with the opposition on the no-deal
vote.
Johnson responded with swift vengeance, expelling
the rebels from the Tory group in Parliament, leaving them as independent
lawmakers. Among those bounced out were Stewart; Nicholas Soames, the grandson
of Winston Churchill; and Kenneth Clarke, a former treasury chief and the
longest-serving member of the House of Commons.
The beleaguered U.K. leader received a boost Wednesday
when a Scottish court refused to intervene in his decision to suspend
Parliament. A Scottish judge ruled that it was a matter for lawmakers to
decide, rather than the courts.
The case was only the first of several challenges to
Johnson’s maneuver, however.
Transparency campaigner Gina Miller, who won a
ruling in the Supreme Court in 2017 that stopped the government from triggering
the countdown to Brexit without a vote in Parliament, has another legal
challenge in the works — set to be heard Thursday. A human rights campaigner
has sued in Northern Ireland, arguing that the historic Good Friday accord that
brought peace is in jeopardy because of Johnson’s actions.