He plans to limit parliament’s opportunity to derail his plans by cutting the amount of time it sits between now and October 31, infuriating opponents who accused him of a constitutional outrage.
These are the key dates between now and Brexit day:
September 3 - Parliament is scheduled to resume for a short session which would typically last around two weeks before there is another break to allow the political parties to hold their annual conferences.
September 9 - Both houses of parliament will debate an act relating to the Northern Ireland executive before beginning preparations to end the parliamentary session ahead of the Queen’s Speech.
September 9-12 - The dates between which at some point parliament will rise if Queen Elizabeth accedes to Johnson’s request to end the session.
September 21 -25 - The opposition Labour Party holds its annual conference.
September 29 to October 2 - Johnson’s Conservative Party holds its annual conference.
October 14 - A new session of parliament will start with the Queen’s Speech outlining the government’s legislative agenda, under Johnson’s plan.
October 17-18 - European Council meeting at which any new Brexit deal would potentially be agreed. Under existing British law, a deal would need approval by parliament before it can be ratified.
October 21-22 - Parliament will vote on the Queen’s Speech and the outcome of the European Council meeting, Johnson has said.
October 31 - Britain is due to leave the European Union.
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