• United Kingdom: The Queen accepts Boris Johnson's plan to suspend the British Parliament
  • Permanence: The opposition calls the British to "take the streets" against Boris Johnson
  • Opposition: Opposition agreement to curb Brexit without agreement by legislative means

US President Donald Trump said Wednesday that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is a "great" ruler for the United Kingdom, after the new president asked Queen Elizabeth II to temporarily suspend Parliament.

"It would be very difficult for Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of the British Labor Party, to seek a motion of censure against the new Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, especially because Boris is exactly what the United Kingdom was looking for and will prove to be 'cool'," Trump wrote on his Twitter account.

Trump's comment has come after Johnson asked Queen Isabell II to suspend Parliament, a controversial step that the opposition calls "undemocratic" and that blocks any threat to avoid a Brexit without agreement. Subsequently, the queen has accepted the plan of the 'premier' and the session in Westminster will not be active between September 9 and 12 and until October 14, two weeks before the date established for the departure of the Kingdom United of the EU, October 31.

The announcement has angered opposition groups, which on Tuesday announced their intention to explore ways to prevent the country from leaving the European Union on October 31 without agreement, an option that seems closer and closer.

To justify his request, Johnson has said that it is "totally uncertain" that after his announcement a second intention to tie the hands of the detractors of the 'no deal' is hidden and has defended that it obeys the intention of his Government to "move forward an ambitious and courageous legislative agenda, " on which they will be able to vote in October.

Parliament will have the opportunity to vote on the proposals for the country's exit from the community bloc "on October 21 and 22," once the Brussels decision is known, according to Johnson.

At the G7 summit, held last weekend, Trump promised a "fairly fast" bilateral trade agreement to Johnson, once the United Kingdom leaves the EU.

The agreement will come "quite quickly," as "no problem is anticipated," Trump said in a brief statement to the press during a working breakfast with Johnson, at the first meeting they both had since the British arrived at the headquarters. from the Government of your country.

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