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by Matt Honeycombe-Foster
08 October 2019
Public would blame MPs more than Boris Johnson if Brexit is delayed, poll finds

Boris Johnson outside Number 10 - Image credit: PA

Public would blame MPs more than Boris Johnson if Brexit is delayed, poll finds

More than 83 per cent of respondents in the ComRes opinion poll said they would point the finger at Parliament

The public would blame MPs more than Boris Johnson if he ends up delaying Brexit again, a new poll has suggested.

The ComRes study for the Daily Telegraph found that 56 per cent would hold the Prime Minister responsible if Brexit does not take place by the 31 October deadline.

But 83 per cent said they would point the finger at Parliament.

Seven in ten said they would blame Remain-supporting MPs specifically, while nearly two-thirds would hold the European Commission responsible.

However, more than two-thirds of 2016 Leave voters (64 per cent) said they would blame Johnson, a figure that rises to 75 per cent among general Conservative voters. 

Johnson has repeatedly insisted that Britain will leave the EU "come what may" on Hallowe'en, despite MPs last month passing a law which orders him to seek an extension from the EU if he cannot agree a Brexit deal by 19 October.

The ComRes poll found that both Leavers and Remainers blamed 'Parliament generally' more than any other entity for the current deadlock, with 94 per cent of Brexiteers and 79 per cent of Remainers pointing the finger at MPs.

The EU has so far given a frosty reception to plans unveiled by the Prime Minister last week in a bid to remove the Irish backstop and strike an agreement. 

On Monday night Johnson urged Brussels to consider his "very fair, generous and reasonable offer".

"We haven't really heard the detail from them about what they think the problems are," he told reporters. 

"It's time for us to get together and really thrash this thing out."

But a Number 10 source – thought to be the PM's top adviser Dominic Cummings – told The Spectator's James Forsyth that talks between the two sides would "probably end this week".

And they pinned the blame on MPs for passing the extension law, known as the Benn Act.

"Those who pushed the Benn Act intended to sabotage a deal and they’ve probably succeeded," the source said.

"So the main effect of it will probably be to help us win an election by uniting the leave vote and then a no deal Brexit.

“History is full of such ironies and tragedies."

Former prime minister David Cameron meanwhile urged Johnson not to try to swerve MPs' demands if he cannot strike a deal with Brussels.

Speaking at an event hosted by The Times, he warned: "You can’t disobey the law as prime minister." 

The ex-Conservative leader meanwhile said he did not know whether Johnson could win an election after another Brexit delay.

ComRes spoke to 2,006 British adults between 4-6 of October for its poll.

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