Johnson sends letter to EU seeking further delay

新华社照片,伦敦,2019年9月25日 (国际)(1)英国首相在议会发表讲话 9月25日,在英国伦敦,英国首相鲍里斯·约翰逊(左)在议会下院发言。 9月24日,英国最高法院做出终审判决,裁定首相鲍里斯·约翰逊要求议会休会五个星期的做法违法。根据最高法院24日做出的判决,议会上下两院议长自行决定下一步行动。两院议长很快宣布,议会将于25日复会。 新华社发(英国议会摄影师杰西卡·泰勒摄)(伦敦分社韩岩,九月二十五日审)(韩岩通联自英国议会,烦请署议会及摄影师名字,以免违反议会的规定。英文加了一段大写请保留,谢谢) BRITAIN-LONDON-PARLIAMENT-REOPEN (190925) -- LONDON, Sept. 25, 2019 (Xinhua) -- British Prime Minister Boris Johnson (L) makes a statement at the House of Commons in London, Britain

London,  UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has sent an unsigned letter to Donald Tusk, the President of the European Council, requesting a further delay to Brexit beyond its current deadline of October 31, hours after he failed to secure votes in Parliament for his new deal.

After losing the crunch vote in a historic Saturday session in the House of Commons, the Prime Minister ordered a senior diplomat to send an unsigned photocopy of the request for a delay, which was forced on him by MPs last month, the BBC reported.

The Prime Minister was required by the law called the Benn Act to ask the EU for an extension to the October 31 deadline in case he lost the Commons vote.

The request was accompanied by a second letter, signed by Johnson, which made clear that he personally believed a delay would be damaging.

It said the government will press on with efforts to pass the revised Brexit deal agreed with EU leaders last week into law, and that he was confident of doing so by October 31.

In it, the Prime Minister said any further hold-up would be “deeply corrosive”, and would “damage the interests of the UK and our EU partners”.

He added that the UK would continue to ratify the deal and urged Brussels to do the same.

A third cover letter written by Tim Barrow, the UK’s Permanent Representative in Brussels, explained the first letter complied with the Act as agreed by Parliament.

Tusk tweeted that he had received the extension request and would consult EU leaders “on how to react”.

This development comes after the MPs, at the first Saturday sitting in the Commons since the 1982 Falklands War, voted by 322 to 306 in favour of an amendment withholding the approval of Johnson’s Brexit deal until all the necessary legislation was completed, the BBC reported.

Tabled by Conservative MP Oliver Letwin, the amendment was intended to ensure that Johnson would comply with the terms of the Benn Act.

Under that Act, passed by MPs last month and which required the Prime Minisrer to seek a Brexit extension, Johnson had until 11 p.m. on Saturday to send a letter requesting a delay.

The fate of Johnson’s deal now lies in the hands of Speaker John Bercow – who on Saturday hinted that he might not allow a meaningful vote on it – the rebel MPs and other EU leaders, especially French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, The Daily Mail said in a report on Sunday.

Downing Street is hopeful that other EU leaders will refuse to allow an extension.

A source said that they put the chances at “about 50 per cent”, adding: “Macron has been particularly trenchant in private about not wanting to extend, and we hope he could take Merkel with him.”

On Saturday night, the French President’s office signalled that they would not back an extension, which officials said was “in nobody’s interest”.

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