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Tuesday 03 September 2019 3:31 pm

Brexit: Boris Johnson urges MPs to vote down ‘Corbyn’s Surrender Bill’

By: Catherine Neilan

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Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson looks on as he speaks with British actress Barbara Windsor (not pictured) after she delivers a petition calling for urgent action on dementia care in the garden at 10 Downing Street on September 2, 2019. - Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson prepared on September 2 for a showdown with MPs opposed to a no-deal Brexit when Parliament returns on September 3. Johnson stoked controversy and protests August 31 across Britain after announcing August 28 he had instructed Queen Elizabeth II to suspend parliament in the final weeks before Brexit. (Photo by SIMON DAWSON / POOL / AFP) (Photo credit should read SIMON DAWSON/AFP/Getty Images)

MPs have been sent a briefing from Number 10, instructing them to stand with the government instead of what it dubs “Corbyn’s Surrender Bill”. 

Read more: Everything you need to know: Your guide to today’s Brexit showdown

The email, which has been seen by City PM, says voting with the opposition over the next two days “would force total surrender – the Prime Minister would have to accept any terms Brussels demands. 

“It also means endless delays – perhaps the permanent cancellation of Brexit. It is a shameful document.”

The Benn-Burt bill, which was published yesterday, is expected to be debated tomorrow if enough MPs back a standing order that is due to be debated this evening. 

A vote is expected at around 9pm this evening. If it is passed, that will give backbenchers control over parliamentary proceedings for long enough to debate and potentially pass this bill before being prorogued next week. 

The Benn-Burt bill would then force Prime Minister Boris Johnson to seek an extension to Article 50 if he fails to secure parliamentary approval, either for a deal or no deal, by 19 October. 

Read more: Goldman Sachs hike probability of a no-deal Brexit

But the government claims it would bind Johnson’s hands. 

“Rather than giving the Prime Minister a chance to negotiate a better deal that could secure the approval of Parliament, this is about crippling negotiations, indefinite delay and, ultimately, cancelling the referendum,” the document claims. 

Read more

Brexit 10 years on: Labour’s EU reset deal is ‘no growth strategy’

According to a new report from UK in a Changing Europe (UKICE), UK services trade has been more resilient than almost all other advanced economies.

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