- 29,374
- Glasgow
- GTP_Mars
Yes, that's probably true - but... the EU have categorically ruled out any extension unless the UK holds a General Election and/or a second referendum.I don't think he's ruled it out in all cases, I took it that he believes it's not required because the deal has been agreed and he believes Johnson can get it through parliament. When/if that goes wrong, there's no longer a deal, and the statement "We have a deal so why should we have a prolongation" becomes irrelevant.
But even then, neither option gives anything like the certainty that the EU will get through this deal - indeed, if anything, a General Election could simply put No Deal back on the table.
One thing is for sure, Labour's plan on Brexit is dead... if it ever were alive in the first place. They have no credible plan, and the Commons has already proved that there is no single option it is prepared to go for, except for a deal with the backstop removed.
IMO, the EU are very unlikely to accept a request for an extension while Johnson still has a chance of getting the deal through. Ironically, it is almost the same argument that Johnson applied but coming from the other side... by keeping an extension on the table, the EU are making a deal less likely - taking an extension off the table could basically force Labour MPs to rethink their plans.