Johnson faces showdown in Parliament

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Johnson faces showdown in Parliament
The PM faces a showdown in Parliament later as MPs aim to take control of the agenda to stop a no-deal Brexit. Ex-chancellor and Tory rebel Philip Hammond said he thought there was enough support for the bill, seeking to delay the UK's exit date, to pass.

No 10 officials warned the prime minister would push for an election on 14 October if the government loses. Boris Johnson said he did not want an election and progress with the EU would be "impossible" if MPs won. Meanwhile, Jeremy Corbyn said the Labour Party was ready for a general election. But shadow Northern Ireland secretary Tony Lloyd later said Labour would vote against any government plans to hold a general election before the UK is due to leave the EU on 31 October.

He said Labour "will not have Boris Johnson dictate the terms of an election that crashes this country out with no deal". A number of MPs have come together across party political lines in a fresh bid to stop a no-deal Brexit, after Mr Johnson vowed to leave the EU with or without a deal on 31 October.

When Parliament returns on Tuesday afternoon after recess, they are expected to put forward legislation under Standing Order 24 - a rule that allows urgent debates to be heard. The bill would force the prime minister to ask for Brexit to be delayed until 31 January, unless MPs had approved a new deal, or voted in favour of a no-deal exit, by 19 October.

Hammond told BBC Radio 4's Today that he believed "there will be enough people for us to get this over the line today" and called it "rank hypocrisy" for Downing Street to have threatened rebel MPs with expulsion from the party and deselection. He said the PM was making "no progress" on getting a Brexit deal. But Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the bill "would create paralysing uncertainty".

"It's craftily designed to allow serial extensions, it would immediately require the UK to accept any EU conditions, however punitive, however harsh, and regardless of those conditions the price tag for the taxpayer would be £1bn each month," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme."That is clearly designed to delay if not to cancel Brexit, and I think it scuppers the very positive progress we've had with the EU to get a deal."

How events will unfold in Parliament (timings approximate after 17.00 BST). 14.30 BST: MPs return from their summer recess. New Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab will be the first cabinet minister of the term to face questions from MPs.

15.30: Boris Johnson is expected to make a statement about the recent G7 summit in Biarritz. This could last for two hours or so. 17.30: There could be another ministerial statement, potentially on reported delays to the opening of the HS2 rail line. After 17.00: If there is no further statement, an MP is expected to make a three-minute application to the Speaker John Bercow for an emergency debate on Brexit.

MPs will then be asked for their consent. If some MPs shout "no", 40 MPs in favour of the debate will need to stand up to ensure the debate goes ahead. 18.00-21.00: If approved, the emergency debate can last up to three hours. 21.00-22.00: MPs will vote on whether to take control of Parliament on Tuesday to extend the Brexit deadline to, at least, the end of January 2020. The vote could be as late as 22.00 BST.

In a televised announcement on Monday, Mr Johnson insisted he could achieve changes to the UK's current Brexit deal at an EU summit on 17 October.But he said that if MPs voted to block the option of a no-deal Brexit they would "plainly chop the legs out from under the UK position" when he is negotiating.The legislation to be put forward on Tuesday seeks to tie Boris Johnson's hands, and instructs him to ask the EU for an extension of the Brexit process until 31 January 2020.

A lot of attention will be on the clause which says that if the European Council proposes an extension to a different date, then the prime minister must accept it within two days, unless that extension has been rejected by the House of Commons. In other words, the power to decide will lie with members of Parliament not with the government.For a PM who has promised to leave on 31 October come what may, it would seem to be impossible to accept. Hence all the talk of an early election. We will know for sure before the end of this week.

Hammond, who was reselected by his local Conservative Party Association on Monday to stand as its candidate in the next election, said he did not believe Number 10 had the power to deselect him. "There will be the fight of a lifetime if they do," the former chancellor said."This is my party. I have been a member of my party for 45 years, I am going to defend my party against incomers, entryists who are trying to turn it from a broad church into a narrow faction."

Hammond said he will not support a motion to dissolve Parliament for a general election until the bill to stop no deal has been passed. Conservative MP Justine Greening, who is also planning to vote in favour of the cross-party legislation, has said she will not stand as a Conservative candidate at the next election.The MP for Putney told BBC Radio 4's Today programme she wanted to "focus on making a difference on the ground on social mobility" and could do that "better" from outside Parliament.

Greening, whose constituency voted to Remain, accused Mr Johnson of offering voters a "messy" general election that forces them to choose between "no deal or Jeremy Corbyn". But Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab told Today that he did not want Tory rebels to feel pushed out of the party, adding: "We do need to focus our minds on the reality of this crucial crossroads week for the country - we want to get out of this Brexit rut we've been in for three years." He urged MPs to vote against the bill and said: "We want a deal, we don't want an election." 
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