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  • BORIS JOHNSON: --how welcome it is, even joyful,

  • that for the first time in this long saga,

  • this house has actually accepted its responsibilities together,

  • come together, and embraced a deal.

  • CROWD: Yea.

  • SEBASTIAN PAYNE: Boris Johnson had a bittersweet victory

  • in the House of Commons last night.

  • On the one hand, the prime minister

  • won a vote in principle on his Brexit deal.

  • A majority of 30 MPs said they would

  • back Mr Johnson's new withdrawal agreement

  • on the second reading.

  • But he then suffered an immediate defeat when

  • the programme motion that defines the terms of debate was

  • defeated.

  • The key thing was only five Labour MPs backed that

  • programme motion whereas 19 had backed Mr Johnson's deal.

  • So once again, we are in Brexit limbo.

  • The House of Commons in theory has

  • approved Mr Johnson's Brexit deal, but not on the timetable

  • he wants to do it.

  • BORIS JOHNSON: The EU must now make up their minds

  • over how to answer parliament's request for a delay.

  • And the first consequence, Mr Speaker,

  • is that the government must take the only responsible course

  • and accelerate our preparations for a no deal outcome.

  • [INTERPOSING VOICES]

  • But secondly, I will speak--

  • I will speak to EU member states about their intentions

  • until they have reached a decision, until we reach--

  • [INAUDIBLE] we will pause this legislation.

  • SEBASTIAN PAYNE: So what's going to happen next?

  • Well, Boris Johnson has thrown Brexit back over to the EU

  • and said there will have to respond on his request

  • to delay Brexit once again.

  • That request was forced by Parliament.

  • If that's a relatively short request or a flexible request

  • that could fall away once a deal is passed,

  • Mr Johnson will probably go along with it.

  • But if EU leaders come back and say

  • it needs to be a much longer request,

  • then Downing Street is going to want

  • to push for a general election.

  • Downing Street has tried for this twice in recent months,

  • but has been thwarted by labour MPs.

  • 2/3 of the Commons needs to vote for a general election.

  • And Labour MPs don't particularly want an election

  • right now, not least because the party is 10 points behind

  • in the opinion polls.

  • BORIS JOHNSON: One way or another,

  • we will leave the EU with this deal to which this house has

  • just given its ascent.

  • CROWD: Yea.

  • SEBASTIAN PAYNE: So once again, it's over to Brussels

  • to see what they come back with.

  • Once again, MPs are very good at saying

  • what they don't want with Brexit,

  • but haven't quite said exactly what they do.

BORIS JOHNSON: --how welcome it is, even joyful,

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