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On a day of humiliating setbacks, United Kingdom Prime Minister Boris Johnson suffered a major defeat in Parliament on the night of Tuesday, 3 September, as rebellious lawmakers voted to seize control of the Brexit agenda, prompting the embattled leader to say he would call for a new general election.
The 328 to 301 vote, made possible by 21 fellow Conservatives who turned their back on Johnson's pleas and face ejection from the party, cleared the way for his opponents to introduce a bill on Wednesday that would seek to prevent Britain from leaving the European Union without a deal on 31 October.
If Johnson enjoyed a brief honeymoon since taking power in July, it came to abrupt end on Tuesday when he faced his first vote — and a startling defeat — in Parliament.
There is still no clarity about how and when Britain will leave the prosperous EU bloc as the tortuous Brexit process nears a climax more than three years after the original vote to leave.
A new election would set the stage for a brutal battle over whether voters favour a "no-deal" Brexit, more negotiations, or possibly a fresh referendum on the entire question of leaving the EU.
The cross-party rebels are fighting to prevent a no-deal Brexit because of fears it would gravely damage the economy and plunge Britain into a prolonged recession while also leading to possible medicine and food shortages.
The vote came hours after Johnson suffered a key defection from his party, costing him his working majority in Parliament.
On a day of high drama and acerbic debate in the House of Commons, lawmakers returned from their summer recess to confront Johnson over his insistence that the U.K. leave the European Union on 31 October, even without a withdrawal agreement to cushion the economic blow.
A new election would take Britain's future directly to the people for a third general election in four years.
It is not clear Johnson would immediately get the two-thirds majority in Parliament needed to call a fresh vote because opponents are wary he might postpone the election date until after Brexit has taken place, in effect ramming through a no-deal exit.
Earlier on Tuesday, two other prominent Conservatives signalled their decision not to seek re-election rather than follow Johnson's Brexit policy. Former Cabinet minister Justine Greening and former Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt also signalled their intention to step down.
Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, said he will not agree to a new election until legislation preventing a "no-deal" exit is in place.
Johnson, who became prime minister in July, has tried to crack down on members of his Conservative Party who oppose his Brexit plans, warning they would be expelled from the party if they supported parliamentary efforts to block or delay the withdrawal.
His stance has infuriated many longtime, prominent party members.
Dominic Grieve, who was attorney general in David Cameron's government, says the expulsion threats demonstrate Johnson's "ruthlessness." Greening said she feared her beloved party was "morphing into Nigel Farage's Brexit Party," in a reference to the U.K.'s foremost euroskeptic and the party he leads.
Former Treasury chief Philip Hammond warned of the "fight of a lifetime" if officials tried to prevent him from running in the next election.
Time to block a no-deal departure is running short. Johnson last week maneuvered to give his political opponents even less time to block a chaotic no-deal Brexit, getting Queen Elizabeth II's approval to suspend Parliament.
His outraged critics sued, and attorneys arguing the case at a court in Scotland completed submissions Tuesday. The judge could rule as soon as Wednesday. Two other major legal challenges to the suspension are pending.
Leaked government documents predicted disruptions to the supply of medicine, decreased availability of fresh food and even potential fresh water shortages because of disruption to supplies of water treatment chemicals.
Johnson insists the potential threat of leaving without a deal must remain as a bargaining chip in negotiations with the EU.
"The one thing that has helped focus minds in the EU is that we're leaving come what may and we've got a very focused task of what a good deal would look like," Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab told ITV. "But the lingering doubt they've got is: Will the shenanigans in Parliament somehow lead to the cancellation or the delay of Brexit?
"That's encouraging them, and weakening our position to actually get the deal we all want."
The bloc insists it won't renegotiate the agreement struck with former Prime Minister Theresa May, which Johnson considers unacceptable.
Johnson has told French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel he could come up with a better alternative to the main sticking point in the stalled negotiations — the deadlock over how to ensure there are no customs checks between the U.K.'s Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland after Brexit.
Only 58 days before the scheduled exit, the EU said it had received no proposals from the British government aimed at overcoming the impasse, undercutting Johnson's claim that progress is being made.
Any British request for an extension would have to be approved by each of the other 27 EU nations before it could be granted.
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