The country's prime minister Boris Johnson wants Parliament to stay closed until October 14, when Queen Elizabeth will give her opening speech - which formally marks the start of Parliament's work, the BBC reports.

On Wednesday, both parties will meet at the Queen's summer residence to discuss the matter.

The data comes just before members return from the summer break in September and just over two months before Brexit - and is highly controversial, the BBC writes. The purpose of Johnson's shutdown is expected to be to limit Parliament's time to oppose his Brexit plan before leaving. He himself rejects the information.

"It's completely untrue," he says in a television interview, reports Reuters.

Tory member Dominic Grieve tells the BBC that the plan is "outrageous" and that "the government will fall".

It has previously been speculated, among other things, that the government would dissolve Parliament before the Brexit and allow the country to leave the EU on October 21 without a House of Commons session. Something that the opposition has criticized.

Earlier in August, President John Berscow said he would refuse to let Johnson take Britain out of the EU by closing Parliament and that he will try to prevent it with "every bone in my body".

Boris Johnson himself has previously said that he wants to leave the EU on October 31 with an agreement, but that he would rather leave rather than miss the deadline.