• United Kingdom The British Government recognizes in its internal documents the chaos that Brexit could cause without agreement
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Premier Boris Johnson has decided to lend a hand and offer readmission in the Conservative Party to the 21 rebel deputies who voted in favor of the law to block the extreme Brexit. According to The Daily Telegraph , Johnson has yielded to the internal pressures of several members of his cabinet in favor of reconciliation (mainly Michael Gove and Sajid Javid) to avoid breaking the game.

The maneuver is also interpreted as a movement of the Premier's pieces in the face of the possible vote of a new agreement with the EU when the Parliament becomes active again, after the temporary suspension until October 14 (still pending a possible failure of the Supreme Court to restore sessions before that date).

In any case, the parliamentary majority in Westminster was already lost and denied the possibility of early elections, Johnson would need to recover some of the lost ground in order to approve a new agreement. In recent days, and despite Johnson's denial, government sources have ensured that progress has been made in the negotiations around the possibility of a "safeguard" applicable only to Northern Ireland and not to the rest of the United Kingdom (a solution to which the ten deputies of the Unionist Democratic Party are categorically opposed).

"Although the decision to expel the deputies is understandable, there must be a way back," government source told The Daily Telegraph . According to the conservative newspaper, Johnson would have already personally written to the rebel parliamentarians to urge them to appeal the expulsion as a first step in order to readmit them.

At least four of them, Steve Brine, Stephen Hammond, Anne Milton and Ricahrd Benyon have already shown signs of being open to the "olive branch" tended by Boris Johnson , who executed the fulminating expulsion following instructions from his special advisor Dominic Cummings, criticized for imposing terror on Downing Street and operating outside the Conservative Party.

Former Treasury Secretary Philip Hammond could have already taken a first step with a letter addressed to the premier and asking for explanations for the cause of his expulsion. Nicholas Soames, grandson of Churhill, has however announced his early departure and has condemned Johnson for having turned the Conservative Party into "the Brexit sect." Veteran Kenneth Clarke, a former minister in several Torian governments since the Thatcher era, has even hinted at his intention to explore his passage to the Liberal-Democratic Party , which has benefited from successive leaks until he reached 17 deputies.

Johnson's announcement comes precisely in the prelude to the annual conference of the Liberal-Democratic Party, which has risen to 20% of the intention to vote with his message clearly anti-Brexit and the possible approval of a manifesto to revoke the Article 50. The conservatives meanwhile in two weeks face their own conference in Manchester with a recovery in the polls thanks to Johnson's popular pull, but at the risk of a break by the moderate wing.

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