The British exit issue is entering a new phase in its history, with a month-long suspension of parliament starting late Monday, while Queen Elizabeth II is expected to sign a bill banning exit without an agreement. It is unclear how Prime Minister Boris Johnson will react to it. that.

"Parliament will postpone its work at the end of the day," spokesman Boris Johnson said, using the term "postponement", which means suspension.

He added that the suspension would be applied regardless of the outcome of the vote called by the government for early elections next month.

Johnson last month asked Queen Elizabeth II to close parliament until October 14, saying it was necessary to be able to present a new domestic agenda.

But the timing of the suspension and the longer-than-usual period of suspension have angered all political spectrums, while critics have called it a "constitutional scandal" and a coup.

Anti-Brexit lawmakers said without agreement that the resolution was clearly aimed at hampering their efforts to prevent such a scenario. The decision also led to judicial appeals before the courts, which have not yet succeeded.

But the decision appeared to backfire on Johnson by attracting opposition lawmakers and dissident conservatives in passing legislation that would force him to ask for a Brexit deadline next month if he does not reach an agreement with the European Union.

Believing the Kingdom and the fear of the opposition
Britain's Queen Elizabeth is expected to ratify the bill on Wednesday, which would prevent Britain from leaving the European Union without an agreement, making it a binding law, forcing the government of Boris Johnson to conclude a comprehensive agreement with the EU before Britain withdraws its membership.

The British parliament passed both legislation last week. The law forces Boris Johnson to delay the exit date by three months, unless he can get a new exit agreement by October 19, immediately after the EU summit on 17 and 18 of the same month.

Boris Johnson reiterated yesterday in a statement to the Sunday Express that he "refuses to agree to any postponement that is not beneficial to him" for the Brexit, who voted for Saleh 52% of Britons in a referendum in June 2016.

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Finance Minister Sajid Javed told the BBC on Sunday that the prime minister "has no intention at all" to request an additional extension at a meeting of the European Council on October 17-18.

The opposition fears that Boris Johnson will ignore the law to prevent the exit without an agreement to move the matter to the courts, knowing that this law is now waiting for only the approval of the Queen to enter into force.

Look for an agreement with Ireland
Amid the debate over the suspension of the House of Commons and the timing and mechanism of Brexit, Johnson said he wanted to reach a positive agreement with Ireland on all issues.

At a joint news conference with his Irish counterpart Leo Fradkar in Dublin, Johnson said he was seeking a deal to get Britain out of the European Union despite parliament's attempts to prevent it from getting out without agreement.

But he warned of what he said would be lasting damage to his country's democratic system if it failed to leave the European Union at the end of October.

Irish Prime Minister Leo Fradkar said Britain had yet to find alternatives to the safety net deal.

His Government was prepared to listen to any realistic alternatives, but the absence of such a mechanism meant that no agreement had been reached.

The safety net mechanism is one of the most controversial provisions of the Brexit agreement, as it aims not to re-impose rigid borders between the EU member state Ireland and Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK.