Wednesday

Brexit: All the latest updates | UK News

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is in the midst of a major parliamentary showdown over his bid to take the United Kingdom out of the European Union by an October 31 deadline, with or without a divorce deal.

On their first day back after summer holidays, rebel and opposition MPs on Tuesday voted in favour of seizing control of the parliamentary agenda for the following day in order to introduce a bill forcing the prime minister to request a Brexit delay until January 31, 2020 – unless legislators approve a withdrawal agreement, or vote in favour of a so-called no-deal departure by October 19.

Johnson has threatened to push for a snap general election on October 15 if the bill is passed, while his administration has meanwhile moved to expel rebel MPs from his own ruling Conservative Party for defying the government in Tuesday’s vote.

The rapidly unfolding Brexit drama comes in the run-up to a controversial weeks-long suspension of parliament from mid-September until mid-October.

Here are all the latest updates:

Wednesday, September 4

UK legislators approve second reading of ‘rebel alliance’ Brexit bill

MPs voted by 329 to 300 in favour of holding a second reading on a bill introduced by the main opposition Labour Party which seeks to give Johnson’s government until October 19 to negotiate a new deal with the EU, or get MPs consent for a no-deal exit from the bloc.

The bill will now move on to committee stage. MPs will then vote again on the bill at about 18:00GMT. If successful at this juncture it will move to the upper chamber House of Lords.

Any election must happen before October EU summit: Gov’t spokesman

If a general election is necessary, it must take place before an EU summit which starts on October 17, Johnson’s spokesman said.

Earlier, the British leader had called for an October 15 snap poll if legislation seeking to block a no-deal Brexit was passed by a so-called “rebel alliance” of MPs keen to avert such a scenario.

Under UK law, two-thirds of parliamentarians must sign off on holding a general election for it to take place.

Brexit

Britain is currently scheduled to exit the European Union on October 31 [File: Yves Herman/Reuters]

MPs begin debating bill that could block no-deal

The purpose of legislation MPs are hoping to pass on Wednesday is to ensure the country does not leave the EU without a deal at the end of October, opposition Labour Party MP Hilary Benn said as he presented the bill to parliament.

UK PM to push for new poll if no-deal Brexit is made unlawful

“The purpose of the bill is very simple.It is to ensure that the United Kingdom does not leave the European Union on the 31st October without an agreement,” Benn told parliament at the start of the debate on the legislation.

“The bill is deliberately open as to the purpose of the extension,” he added.

If passed, the legislation would make it unlawful for Johnson to take the UK out of the EU by Halloween without a divorce deal – unless parliament signs off on a no-deal exit first.

Labour to vote against general election

Britain’s main opposition Labour Party will not back a vote expected to be brought forward later on Wednesday to hold an election and was seeking to pass legislation to prevent a no-deal Brexit before backing a new poll, the party’s finance policy chief said.

John McDonnell, Labour’s shadow finance minister, told reporters the party was “not going to be tricked or conned by Johnson so we’re looking at every way in which, having secured the legislation, he can’t wriggle out of abiding by the law and implementing it”.

“At the moment there’s nothing that Johnson has done in recent weeks that gives us confidence he’s going to abide by the law,” he added.

An anti-Brexit placard is attached to a dog in London, Britain, September 4, 2019.

An anti-Brexit placard is attached to a dog in London, where pro-remain and pro-Brexit protesters were demonstrating outside parliament [Hannah McKay/Reuters]

Bank of England scales back worst-case Brexit estimate

The Bank of England, the UK’s central bank, lowered its estimate for the scale of damage to Britain’s economy in a worst-case Brexit scenario because of preparations undertaken since the end of last year, Governor Mark Carney said.

Carney said the central bank now estimated that gross domestic product would contract by 5.5 percent peak to trough, less than the 8 percent seen in a set of scenarios published in November.

In a letter to legislators, Carney stressed the Bank of England had drawn up scenarios of what could happen rather than forecasts for the most likely outcome and said “more can be accomplished” if there is a further Brexit delay to January 31.

MP slams ‘divisive’ PM Johnson

Amid the UK’s unfolding Brexit crisis, Labour Party MP Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi demanded Johnson apologise for saying Muslim women wearing the veil looked like “bank robbers” or “letter boxes” in a 2018 article for the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

Addressing the prime minister in parliament, Singh said: “For those of us who from a young age have had to endure and face up to being called names such as towel-head, or Taliban, or coming from bongo-bongo land, we can fully appreciate the hurt and pain of already vulnerable Muslim women when they are described as looking like bank robbers and letterboxes.”

Singh also asked Johnson when he was going to order an inquiry into alleged Islamophobia within the Conservative Party, after the latter pledged to do so during his campaign earlier this year to become the party’s leader.

‘Turning page on austerity’

Sajid Javid, Britain’s finance minister, said he was “turning the page on austerity” as he outlined spending increases widely seen part of a push for an early election by Johnson.

“A new economic era needs a new economic plan and today we lay the foundations with the fastest increase in day-to-day spending in 15 years,” Javid told parliament.

In his first major speech since taking over the public purse strings in July, Javid promised more money for “the people’s priorities” – education, health and the police – after a decade of tight spending controls under successive Conservative Party-led governments.

Read more here.

Pound Sterling notes and change are seen inside a cash resgister in a coffee shop in Manchester, Britain, September 21, 2018

The UK government’s independent forecasting body warned in July that a no-deal departure from the EU would shrink the British economy by two percent and plunge it into a recession [File: Phil Noble/Reuters]

Turkey says no-deal Brexit could cost $3bn in trade losses

Turkey may lose trade with Britain worth up to $3bn in the event of a no-deal Brexit, Trade Minister Ruhsar Pekcan said, adding that many Turkish companies lacked information on the consequences of such a scenario.

Pekcan, speaking at a Turkey-UK Business Forum in Istanbul, said the losses would stem from Britain hiking import tariffs after Brexit in sectors including steel, car manufacturing and textiles. She also said her ministry would begin touring the country to inform companies on the potential impact of a no-deal Brexit.

UK has presented no Brexit solutions, Ireland says

Britain has not yet presented any solutions to solve the Brexit impasse, Ireland’s foreign minister said after Johnson told parliament “substantial progress”was being made in negotiations over a new divorce deal.

UK’s Jeremy Corbyn and Boris Johnson clash over no-deal Brexit

“This process cannot move forward unless and until the British government comes forward with actual proposals that make sense so we can interrogate them,” Simon Coveney told reporters.

“The British government does need to hear this message very clearly both privately and publicly that this is a problem that’s real, that’s complex and needs a solution, and at the moment they haven’t come forward with any solutions,” he added.

At the heart of the Brexit impasse is the existing withdrawal agreement’s so-called “backstop” provision, a clause designed to ensure no hard border is restored between  Northern Ireland, a constituent part of the UK, and EU member Ireland.

‘Like a dictator, more than a democrat’

Ian Blackford, leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP) in the House of Commons, said Johnson was “behaving like a dictator, more than a democrat”.

“The PM must be stopped, MPs must unite across this house to take no-deal off the table tonight,” Blackford told parliament.

An analysis published by The Times newspaper earlier on Wednesday suggested Johnson’s Conservative Party would lose 10 of their 13 seats in Scotland at any new election amid an expected SNP surge, with support for Scottish independence now at 49 percent, according to polling conducted by YouGov.

Pro-Brexit protester holds a placard as they demonstrate at Westminster in London, Britain, September 4, 2019

Nearly 52 percent of voters – more than 17 million people – opted to leave the EU during a June 2016 referendum [Henry Nicholls/Reuters]

Johnson proposes October 15 election

During his first outing at weekly Prime Minister’s Questions, Johnson claimed his government was making “substantial progress” in talks with the EU over a new Brexit deal but refused to directly answer questions from Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn over what fresh proposals his administration had put to the bloc.

Johnson also told parliament a Labour Party-led plan to try and prevent a no-deal departure from the bloc was a “surrender bill” and challenged Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn to vote in favour of a general election for October 15 if the legislation passed.

“This government will take this country out of the European Union on October 31st, and there is only one thing that stands in our way, it is the ‘surrender bill’ currently being proposed by the leader of the opposition,” Johnson said.

“Can I invite the leader of the opposition to confirm, when he stands up shortly, that if that surrender bill is passed, he will allow the people of this country to have their view on what he is proposing to hand over in their name, with an election on October 15,” he added.

UK’s Corbyn says will not fall for PM’s ‘tricks’ 

Main opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn told opposition parties Labour would not fall for “Boris Johnson’s tricks” and would not support a new election until he is confident that the threat of a no-deal Brexit has been removed.

Corbyn, who has repeatedly called for a new election, hosted opposition parties as part of a series of meetings to try to thwart what many of them see as Johnson’s bid to lead Britain out of the European Union without a deal on October 31.

“Jeremy made clear that Labour wants a general election, and soon, but that we will not fall for Boris Johnson’s tricks,” his office said in a statement.

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson

Johnson told parliament a Labour Party-led plan to try and prevent a no-deal departure from the EU on October 31 was a ‘surrender bill’ [Parliament TV via Reuters]

Risk of no-deal Brexit has increased: EU

The risk of Britain crashing out of the EU without a divorce deal to cushion the blow has increased, the bloc warned Wednesday, as political turmoil raged in London.

“The short time remaining and the political situation in the United Kingdom have increased the risk that the United Kingdom will withdraw on that date without an agreement,” the European Commission said as it issued its final preparations for a chaotic “no-deal” Brexit.

Major Brexit events expected today 

Johnson’s defeat in parliament on Tuesday leaves Brexit up in the air. Below is an outline of the major Brexit events expected today. All times are in GMT.

1100: Johnson versus Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn at Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons.

1200: Finance minister Sajid Javid will announce increases in public spending, preparing the ground for a possible snap election call by Johnson, who is seeking a way to break resistance to his Brexit plans.

1400: Opposition parties and Conservative Party rebels grab control of House of Commons business to usher in a debate on Labour legislator Hillary Benn’s bill to block a no-deal Brexit.

There will be votes on the bill before 1800.

1800: Johnson seeks a general election (up to 90 minutes).

1930: Possible vote on an election.

Scottish court rules parliament suspension lawful

Johnson’s decision to suspend parliament later this month until mid-October is lawful, a Scottish court ruled.

More than 75 legislators had legally challenged Johnson’s right to suspend, or prorogue, parliament arguing it was illegal and unconstitutional because he was seeking to do so in order to force through a no-deal Brexit on October 31 by limiting the opportunity for MPs to block such a move.

“This is political territory and decision-making, which cannot be measured by legal standards, but only by political judgements,” Judge Raymond Doherty said in his ruling.

“I do not accept the submission that the prorogation contravenes the rule of law.”

We do not trust PM Johnson – Labour Brexit spokesman

Britain’s main opposition Labour Party does not trust Johnson’s proposal to hold an election on October 15, before the country is due to leave the EU, its Brexit spokesman Keir Starmer said.

Labour wants a no-deal Brexit to be taken off the table before it backs a snap poll.

“When he [Johnson] says October 15, I can tell you across all the opposition parties and some Tory MPs, they do not trust him,” Starmer told the BBC.

 Keir Starmer

Labour Party’s Shadow Secretary of State for Brexit Keir Starmer appears on BBC TV’s The Andrew Marr Show [Reuters]

Top adviser to UK PM denies he said EU talks were a sham 

Johnson’s top adviser Dominic Cummings denied that he had described the government’s attempts to renegotiate the Brexit deal with Brussels as a sham.

Cummings, the former head of the Vote Leave campaign, was said to have made the remarks after Johnson’s visit to Paris and Berlin last month. 

When asked if the Brexit negotiations with the EU were a sham, Cummings said: “No. I never said that.”

Hopes for Brexit delay rally pound

The British pound bounced in the wake of a parliamentary vote opening the door for another Brexit delay.

The pound, which has lost nearly 20 percent of its value since the UK voted to leave the European Union in 2016, fell to as low as $1.1959 on Tuesday but then rebounded after Johnson lost his working majority in the British parliament following the defection of one of his Conservative Party MPs.

Traders in London said heightened uncertainty was making investors panic, as the battle over Brexit continues this week.

Read more here

Tuesday, September 3

Brexit Britain fumes at reclining MP

The sight of hardline Brexit backer Jacob Rees-Mogg stretching out across the front bench of Britain’s parliament during a particularly heated debate became an instant meme and attracted anger from the government’s critics.

With his round glasses pointing at the ceiling and wearing a double-breasted suit, the image of Rees-Mogg apparently taking a rest in the crucial final minutes before a crunch Brexit vote lit up Twitter.

Read more here

Rebel Conservative Party MPs to be expelled from party: Report

Johnson’s chief whip, or parliamentary enforcer, was speaking to Conservative Party legislators who voted in favour of a move to try to stop a no-deal Brexit to inform them they would be expelled from the party, Reuters news agency reported, citing a spokesman for the British leader.

“The chief whip is speaking to those Tory [Conservative] MPs who did not vote with the government this evening. They will have the Tory whip removed,” Reuters quoted the spokesman from Johnson’s office as saying.

Opposition defiant over election timing

Reacting to Johnson’s threat to push for a general election, Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, said he wanted legislation preventing a no-deal Brexit in place before his party could agree to a new poll.

As I have said before: if the prime minister has confidence in his Brexit policy – when he has one he can put forward – he should put it before the people in a public vote,” Corbyn said in parliament.

And so, he wants to table a motion for a general election, fine get the bill through first in order to take no-deal off the table,” he added.

The Labour leader’s comments were echoed by other opposition politicians – including Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson, and the leader of the Scottish National Party in the House of Commons, Ian Blackford, who both said there should be no election while no-deal remained a possibility.

Johnson threatens election

Johnson said his government would table a motion on Wednesday asking legislators to allow a snap election after MPs voted to seize control of the parliamentary agenda, suggesting a poll would be the only way to resolve Britain’s Brexit impasse if he is forced to seek another delay to the UK’s departure from the EU.

“I don’t want an election but if MPs vote tomorrow to stop negotiations and to compel another pointless delay to Brexit, potentially for years, then that will be the only way to resolve this,” Johnson said.

Under UK law, two-thirds of parliamentarians must sign off on holding a general election for it to take place.

MPs vote to seize control of parliament

Legislators backed a motion allowing a cross-party alliance of opposition MPs and Conservative Party rebels to take control of the parliamentary agenda.

MPs voted by 328 to 301 in favour of the proposal, with 21 Conservative legislators rallying against Johnson’s administration to inflict a first House of Commons defeat on the recently-installed prime minister.

Legislators are expected to table a bill on Wednesday that, if passed, would make it unlawful for Johnson to take the UK out of the EU on October 31 without a divorce deal – unless parliament signs off on a no-deal exit first.

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks at the House of Commons in London, Britain September 3, 2019

MPs on Tuesday voted by 328 to 301 on in favour of a motion allowing a cross-party alliance of MPs to take control of the parliamentary agenda  [UK Parliament/Roger Harris/Handout via Reuters]

Ireland to ramp up Brexit preparations

Ireland will begin a new phase of no-deal Brexit preparations on Wednesday with a call to action encouraging businesses to increase their level of preparedness, the government said after its weekly Cabinet meeting.

“The government was this evening briefed on the latest position on Brexit negotiations between the EU and UK, and in that context, noted the increasing risk of a no-deal Brexit on October 31,” a government statement said.

“The government also noted that a number of exercises are planned for the coming weeks to help further refine preparations and inform the approach to emergency crisis management in the event of a no deal Brexit,” it added.

EU to help firms, workers in case of no-deal: Report

The European Commission will propose financial help for EU businesses, workers and farmers if Britain crashes out of the bloc without any agreement, Reuters news agency reported, citing a document seen by the news agency.

Boris Johnson loses parliamentary majority as Brexit crisis bites

On Wednesday, the EU executive arm will propose using the European Solidarity Fund, normally used to help victims of natural disasters in the EU, to cushion the financial blow for some EU countries most exposed to trade with Britain, Reuters reported.

The Commission also wants to use the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund, created to help EU workers who lose jobs due to globalisation, to be used for those dismissed after a “no-deal” crashing out, the document seen by Reuters said.

Labour Party want election, but after no-deal ruled out

Emily Thornberry, the shadow foreign secretary, told Sky News the Labour Party was desperate to hold a general election but suggested the party might vote against any move tomorrow by the government to bring forward a ballot.

Thornberry said Labour wanted to see legislation ruling out a no-deal Brexit on October 31 passed first amid fears Johnson’s government could win required parliamentary support for an election to be held before the deadline for leaving the bloc, only to subsequently postpone the vote and take Britain out of the EU by default.

Anti-Brexit protesters attend a demonstration outside the Houses of Parliament, in London, Britain September 3, 2019

Anti-Brexit protesters attend a demonstration outside the Houses of Parliament, in London, on Tuesday [Hannah McKay/Reuters]

‘The people are our masters’

Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg, the Leader of the House of Commons, denounced proceedings in parliament as “unconstitutional” as he rallied against legislators bid to alter the government’s Brexit plan.

The use of emergency debates is unconstitutional. And the bill itself is yet more unconstitutional,” Rees-Mogg told MPs in the Commons, adding that legislators should not “challenge the people” over their decision to exit the EU.

“We should recognise that the people are our masters and show us to be their lieges and servants, not to place ourselves in the position of their overlords,” he added.

Speaker approves emergency debate on Brexit

Speaker John Bercow granted approval for an emergency debate on Brexit applied for by Conservative Party MP Oliver Letwin.

UK: Alliance of rebel, opposition MPs seek to prevent ‘no-deal’ Brexit

The debate will last for up to three hours, Bercow said, after a requisite more than 40 MPs assented to it going ahead.

It will conclude with a vote on whether MPs can seize control of the parliamentary agenda on Wednesday, when rebel Conservative and opposition legislators hope to introduce legislation which could ultimately lead to the blocking of a no-deal Brexit on October 31.

Churchill’s grandson, former minister, to vote against PM

Conservative Party MP Nicholas Soames, the grandson of Britain’s World War Two leader Winston Churchill, said he would rebel against the government over its Brexit plan.

Replying to a Twitter post by former Secretary of State for International Development Rory Stewart, in which the one-time Conservative leadership candidate announced he would vote against “no-deal”, Soames commented “MeToo”.

Several high-profile Conservative MPs, including a number of former ministers, earlier announced they would vote to oppose a no-deal Brexit on October 31. Among them were former finance minister Philip Hammond and former justice minister David Gauke.

‘What a way to end summer holidays’

Al Jazeera’s Jonah Hull, reporting from London, said Johnson had endured a “bruising” time in parliament as MPs keen to prevent a no-deal Brexit rallied against him on their first day back in the House of Commons after a summer recess.

It has been a pretty extraordinary day… what a way to end the summer holidays,” Hull said, referencing Conservative MP Phillip Lee’s dramatic defection from the party.

Commenting on rebel and opposition MPs upcoming attempt to bring forward fresh Brexit legislation, Hull said any vote on the proposed bill was likely to be “extremely close”.

“It relies on a number of Conservative Party MPs to break ranks and vote against their own government if it is to succeed … but the rebel alliance, as they call themselves, believe they have the numbers to win,” he added.

‘No mandate, morals, majority’

Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn attacked Johnson for trying to take Britain out of the EU without a deal despite the costs of such a move.

Addressing parliament, Corbyn said the government had “no mandate, no morals, and, as of today, no majority”.

“The attack on our democracy in order to force through a disastrous no-deal Brexit is unprecedented, anti-democratic and unconstitutional,” he added.

No-deal can be managed, minister says

Michael Gove, the government minister in charge of preparing Britain for a no-deal Brexit, acknowledged that departing the EU without a withdrawal agreement would present significant challenges but said the risks could be mitigated.

Gove also told MPs that many of the steps required to ensure smooth trade after Brexit were the responsibility of businesses.

Johnson slams ‘surrender bill’

Johnson denounced legislation prepared by opposition MPs which could, if passed, force the British leader to request a Brexit extension from the EU until January 31, 2020.

Addressing parliament, Johnson said the bill amounted to “surrender” and would leave Britain locked in to the EU for as “long as they [the bloc’s members] want and on their terms”.

“I will never surrender the control of the negotiations in the way the leader of the opposition is demanding,” he said, referring to Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn.

“Enough is enough. This country wants this done. They want the referendum respected. We are negotiating a deal and though I am confident of getting a deal we will leave on 31 October in all circumstances. There will be no further pointless delay,” he added.

Britain's opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn

Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn accused Johnson of ‘attacking’ the UK’s democracy in a bid to ‘force through a disastrous no-deal Brexit’ [File: Russell Cheyne/Reuters]

No-deal Brexit would cost UK billions, UN says

Leaving the EU without a trade deal would cost Britain at least $16bn in lost exports, and would probably cost far more after indirect effects are taken into account, a report by the UN trade agency UNCTAD said.

“UNCTAD’s research indicates that a no-deal Brexit will result in UK export losses of at least $16 billion, representing an approximate 7% loss of overall UK exports to the EU,” the agency said.

“These losses would be much greater because of non-tariff measures, border controls and consequent disruption of existing UK-EU production networks,” it added.

The Office for Budget Responsibility, the UK government’s independent forecasting body, warned in July that a no-deal departure from the EU would shrink the British economy by two percent and plunge it into a recession.

Conservative MP defects, gov’t loses majority

MP Phillip Lee defected from the Conservative Party to join the opposition Liberal Democrats, leaving Johnson’s government without a working majority.

“This Conservative Government is aggressively pursuing a damaging Brexit in unprincipled ways,” Lee said in a statement.

“It is putting lives and livelihoods at risk unnecessarily and it is wantonly endangering the integrity of the United Kingdom. More widely, it is undermining our country’s economy, democracy and role in the world,” he added, before accusing Johnson’s administration of “using manipulation, bullying and lies … in a deliberate and considered way”.

Read more here.

Johnson to meet Irish PM

Johnson said he would meet Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar in Dublin on Monday as part of efforts to reach a deal to leave the EU.

Addressing parliament after it returned from a summer recess, Johnson said he was making progress in talks with the EU to change an agreement negotiated by his predecessor Theresa May.

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the media outside Downing Street in London, Britain, September 2, 2019

Johnson has pledged to take the UK out of the EU by October 31, with or without a divorce deal [File: Simon Dawson/Reuters]

He argued there were other ways to avoid any return to a hard border between Northern Ireland, a constituent part of the UK, and EU member Ireland than the existing withdrawal agreement’s so-called “backstop” provision.

European leaders have consistently rejected calls for the safety net to be axed, however, with the bloc’s lead Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier saying over the weekend that the controversial clause was the “maximum flexibility” the EU could offer.

Opposition alliance bids to avert no-deal

Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said opposition parties were “united” in working together on ways to stop Johnson from using an early election to force through a no-deal Brexit.

“We are confident that the legislative route we have adopted has every chance of being successful, and we are working on ways in which we can prevent Boris Johnson manipulating an election to force a no-deal Brexit,” Corbyn said in a statement after meeting the leaders of other opposition parties.

“Labour wants to prevent a no-deal Brexit, and to have a general election, so we can end austerity and invest in our communities. I am confident we can have both, and we’ve been in discussions about a way to achieve this,” he added.

Court hears suspension of parliament case

Johnson was looking to suspend parliament two weeks before this month’s planned shutdown was officially announced, a court was told.

The prime minister attracted controversy when he announced on August 28 he would suspend parliament from mid-September to mid-October to allow the government to announce a new legislative programme.

Political opponents, who argue it was simply a tactic to prevent them from trying to stop a no-deal Brexit, had already turned to Scotland’s highest civil court to ask it to rule that it would be illegal and unconstitutional for parliament to be suspended before the EU exit date.

Anti-Brexit protester Steve Bray holds a placard as he attends a demonstration outside the Houses of the Parliament in London, Britain September 3, 2019

Critics of Johnson have accused the British PM of attempting to stage a ‘coup’ by suspending parliament for up to five weeks in the run-up to October 31 [Henry Nicholls/Reuters]

At a hearing, the lawyer representing more than 70 legislators told Scotland’s Court of Session that two weeks before Johnson’s announcement, he was sent a note from an aide asking if he wanted to prorogue, or suspend, parliament from mid-September. A tick and the word “yes” was written on the document, lawyer Aidan O’Neill said.

Johnson declined to give a sworn statement to the court setting out his reasons for shutting down parliament.

Sterling tumbles

Sterling plunged to a three-year low below $1.20 as Johnson’s implicit threat to legislators to back him on Brexit or face an election sent investors scrambling to dump British assets.

The pound, which has lost 20 percent of its value since Britain voted to leave the European Union in 2016, fell as low as $1.1959 before recovering.

Barring an October 2016 flash crash when sterling briefly reached $1.15, the British currency has not regularly traded at such levels since 1985, according to Refinitiv data cited by Reuters news agency.

Read more here.

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