Johnson hints EU could block Brexit delay
MANCHESTER: Prime Minister Boris Johnson has hinted the European Union could veto a further delay to Brexit as he insisted he will get the UK out of the bloc on October 31 with or without a deal.
Johnson, who maintained his attack on the Benn Act which could force him to seek a delay if a deal has not been approved by October 19, said EU leaders would be reluctant to keep a “truculent” UK in the group.
He refused to be drawn on whether he would ask one of his fellow leaders to veto an extension in order to ensure the October 31 deadline was preserved. Johnson also ruled out resigning in order to allow someone else to ask for a Brexit delay.
“I’ve undertaken to lead the party and my country at a difficult time and I’m going to continue to do that,” he said. As the Conservative Party conference began in Manchester on Sunday, Johnson set out plans for 40 new hospitals as the Tories prepare to make the NHS a key battleground in the next general election.
He also hit out at the “novel and peculiar” decision by the Supreme Court to rule that his suspension of parliament was unlawful.Johnson defended his use of language in the Commons during Wednesday’s heated exchanges but apologised if there was a misunderstanding over his use of the word “humbug” in response to an MP’s concerns about death threats
He said resolving the Brexit crisis would be the best thing for “people’s overall psychological health” and insisted he had “no interest to declare” in response to the storm over his links to American entrepreneur Jennifer Arcuri while he was mayor of London.
Delivering Brexit on October 31 is a totemic pledge for Johnson and he claimed the Benn Act, which he repeatedly called the Surrender Act, was hampering efforts to strike a Brexit deal. He said that in Brussels “if they think there is a realistic chance that the UK can be kept in”, that “takes away a lot of our negotiating freedom of manoeuvre”.
Despite the Benn Act he claimed that “of course we can” leave the EU without a deal on October 31. He refused to set out how he would do that but did not rule out asking another EU leader to veto a request for a delay.
“I’m not going to get into my discussions with any other EU head of state about the negotiations, because they are extremely interesting but they are also delicate,” he told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show.
But he added: “It is certainly true that other EU countries also don’t want this thing to keep dragging on. They don’t want the UK to remain in the EU, truculent and mutinous and in a limbo, and not wishing to cooperate in the way that they would like.
“They want a good deal and there’s the opportunity now to get a good deal. What I would like is for the government to be able to get on and do that deal, and we are working very hard. I’m not going to pretend to you that it’s going to be easy.”
The fallout continued from Wednesday’s stormy Commons session, with Johnson insisting he had been a “model of restraint”. Johnson defended his use of words such as “surrender”, saying to avoid doing so was “impoverishing the language and diminishing parliamentary debate”.
He said: “I think what most people in this country would agree is that Brexit discussion has been going on for far too long and it is true that tempers on both sides have now become inflamed.” But he said that “we haven’t got a prayer of uniting the country until we get Brexit over the line”.With the conference opening in Manchester on Sunday, Johnson said the government was embarking on “the biggest hospital building programme in a generation”.
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