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Brexit outcome expected to depend on handful of votes

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson puts his last-minute Brexit deal to a vote in an extraordinary sitting of the British parliament on Saturday, a day of reckoning that could decide the course of the United Kingdom’s departure from the European Union.

More than three years since the United Kingdom voted 52-48 to be the first sovereign country to leave the European project, Mr Johnson will try to win parliament’s approval for the divorce treaty he struck in Brussels on Thursday.

In a day of Brexit high drama, lawmakers convene for the first Saturday sitting since the 1982 Argentine invasion of the Falklands, while hundreds of thousands of people are due to march to parliament demanding another referendum.

Mr Johnson depicted the vote in parliament as the last chance to secure an orderly Brexit. Though he is obliged by law to seek a Brexit delay if his deal falls, Mr Johnson said the United Kingdom would still leave on October 31st. He didn’t explain how.

The so-called “Super Saturday” Brexit extravaganza tops a frenetic week which saw Mr Johnson confound his opponents by clinching a new Brexit deal only to find his Northern Irish allies oppose the deal he struck.

In a divided parliament where he has no majority and opponents are plotting maximum political damage ahead of an imminent election, Mr Johnson must now win the support of 320 lawmakers to pass his deal through a booby-trapped legislature.

Handful of votes

With a number of hardline Brexiteers still undecided and a group of expelled Conservatives divided over how to vote, the outcome is expected to depend on a handful of votes.

Early on Saturday morning, the ERG’s Bernard Jenkin appeared to confirm that he and the rest of the group would be backing the deal.

He tweeted: “This deal is hundreds of miles from perfect. It has terrible elements, but we are where we are. At least BackBoris has substantially improved it and it now points in a far more positive direction for our country.”

Addressing parliament on Saturday morning Mr Johnson urged MPs to back his Brexit deal telling them that the time had come to heal the rift in British politics over the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.

He said the agreement he has struck with Brussels would allow the UK to leave “whole and entire” on October 31st.

However he faces another hurdle with opposition MPs threatening to vote for an amendment withholding approval until legislation to implement the deal is in place.

Sir Oliver Letwin, the former Cabinet minister who had the Tory whip withdrawn after rebelling over Brexit, said it was an “insurance policy” to prevent Britain “crashing out” without a deal.

Mr Johnson called for MPs to reconcile their differences over Brexit.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks in the House of Commons in London on Saturday.

He told MPs: “The House will need no reminding that this is the second deal and the fourth vote, three-and-a-half years after the nation voted for Brexit.

“And during those years friendships have been strained, families divided and the attention of this House consumed by a single issue that has at times felt incapable of resolution.

“But I hope that this is the moment when we can finally achieve that resolution and reconcile the instincts that compete within us.”

He said any further delay to Brexit would be “pointless, expensive and deeply corrosive of public trust”.

Beginning his address to the House of Commons shortly after 9.30am the Prime Minister thanked parliamentary staff for “giving up their Saturdays” and missing the end of England’s World Cup Rugby tie with Australia. “I wish I could watch it myself.”

He added: “I do hope that in assembling for the purposes of a meaningful vote that we will indeed be allowed to have a meaningful vote this evening.”

‘Duped’

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said his MPs would “not be duped” into supporting the Prime Minister’s Brexit deal.

He told the Commons: “(Mr Johnson) has renegotiated the Withdrawal Agreement and made it even worse. He has renegotiated the Political Declaration and made that even worse.”


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