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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.