British leader rejects any delay in Brexit divorce deadline
LONDON — British Prime Minister on Sunday renewed his vow to take the country out of the European Union by the Brexit deadline, in an apparent contradiction of a government pledge in court days earlier to ask for an extension if there’s no withdrawal deal.
“We will be packing our bags and walking out on” Oct. 31, Boris Johnson wrote in the Sun on Sunday and Sunday Express newspapers.
“The only question is whether Brussels cheerily waves us off with a mutually agreeable deal or whether we will be forced to head off on our own.”
Johnson’s comments are in line with his past assertions on the key question of whether Britain, if it can’t finalize a divorce deal with the bloc, would leave without an agreement. But they are at odds with a U.K. government document quoted in a Scottish court Friday indicating Johnson intends to comply with a law Parliament passed this month requiring the prime minister to ask for a delay if there’s no deal with the EU in place by Oct. 19.
It’s not clear how the government will resolve the conflict between Johnson’s public stance and the position taken in court.
Johnson’s op-ed appeared aimed at adding pressure on the EU to agree to his latest Brexit proposals as the deadline nears. He urged EU negotiators to join the British side to agree on a deal the U.K. Parliament can support.
Also Sunday, Johnson presented his proposals to French President Emmanuel Macron, who said EU negotiators will determine in the coming days whether a divorce deal is possible. The two leaders spoke about Johnson’s proposals for an accord to soften the blow of Britain’s pending exit from the EU, Macron’s office said.
Macron, who has resisted a potential extension, told the British prime minister “negotiations should pursue quickly in...