Parliament refused to vote on the exit agreement on Saturday. Instead, they forced Boris Johnson to ask the EU for more time for departure - which he then did and did not do by sending two conflicting letters to the EU.

On Monday, President John Bercow ruled that there will be no vote on the agreement on Monday either. Instead, Parliament will now vote on the new exit law that must be pushed through for the agreement to expire.

"There will be drama"

What is happening now?

"We will see a guerrilla war in Parliament," a source from the Northern Ireland DUP said today. The next feud will already be on Tuesday when the lower house will debate and vote on legislative changes that are necessary for an exit agreement to become British law, says SVT's foreign reporter Anna-Maja Persson on location in London.

She continues:

- Then we will see different opponents to this agreement in different ways trying to force a course change. For example, Labor should submit an addition to the UK remaining in the EU Customs Union. There will be drama.

But what happens if the bill is pushed through, but Parliament continues to refuse the club through the agreement itself?

- We don't know, nobody knows. That's the straight answer. This is the only thing Boris Johnson can do - to present these changes to the law. Then they will be debated in Parliament in the usual order. But what comes next, nobody knows.

May be newly elected

However, Anna-Maja Persson notes that Tuesday can once again be absolutely crucial to what is going on in the future.

- If the law changes are stopped, there is no possible way forward. Then Johnson has no choice but to accept that they cannot leave on October 31st. Its over. Then it is believed that he will accept an extension, if the EU agrees to it, and then invest in announcing new elections as soon as possible.