british prime minister boris johnson and members of parliament are now converging on the house of commons forp a rare saturday session. hasn t been one in nearly 40 years. and to be voted on, another attempt to get the brexit agreement through parliament before the october the 31st deadline. it will be the fourth time three meaningful votes under theresa may on her deal. but the big difference is boris johnson has managed to renegotiate, get rid of the so-called backstop, put together a new deal and there is no clear indication if this incarnation fares any better than theresa may. these are the sort of terms about the northern ireland
can unite the warring instincts in us all. and now is the time for this great house of commons to come together and bring the country together today. as i believe database as i believe people at home are hoping and expecting. with a new way forward and a new and better deal, both for britain and for our friends in the eu. and that is the advantage of the agreement that we have struck with our friends in the last two days. because this deal allows the uk, whole and entire, to leave the eu on october the 31st in accordance with the referendum while simultaneously looking forward to a new partnership based on the closest ties of friendship and dwopgz.
he probably, and boris johnson may well have had had enough votes to get this thing passed, but this amendment that came before kind of ruined the whole party, but boris johnson after hearing the result of the amendments spoke to lawmakers and said forget about it, i m not going to negotiate with the eu. take a listen. daunted or dismayed by this particular result, the best thing for the u.k. and for the whole of europe is for us to leave with this new deal on october the 31st. and to anticipate the questions that are coming from i will not negotiate a delay with the eu and neither and neither does the law compel me to do so. well, you know, those against boris will say actually the law does compel you. you have to request a delay, but
the e.u. with a deal, i think called majority makers. that boris johnson will do all can you describe that? he can to take britain out of the reason i asked that is what the e.u. october 31st under a you just said the seven primarily women, democratic members who are veterans who no-deal brexit. so i do think that a no-deal came out for the impeachment brexit which remains, of course, the heel default inquiry. what type of shift have you seen, especially when dealing position remains a very strong possibility for october with the moderate members? the 31st. certainly, johnson will do all not like ocasio cortez who today he can to deliver a brexit with endorsed bernie sanders, but many of the moderate members who are going slowly in terms of a deal negotiated, of course, with the european union. getting them and pushing them over toward perhaps supporting it s really up to parliament this inquiry? yeah, majority makers is an whether or not that goes forward. but certainly are, as
free trade agreements with they are going home, meeting countries across the world with their constituents, talking including with the united to them about the issues that states. above all, brexit is about are important to them, which for a lot f democrats, the house freedom and liberty. it s about the right of the members but also their british people to shape their constituents is healthcare and infrastructure, but they are going home and telling them the own destiny for decades, for serious nature of what s centuries to come. happened, foreign interference in our elections is something and so brexit was the greatest that everybody in this country should be against. exercise in british democratic the quid pro quo, the pressuring history. of foreign leader to investigate when 17.4 million britons voted your political opponent is to lead the european union, it something that i think almost all americans think is just is vitally important that parliament respects the will of beyond the