Johnson sends three letters to the EU about Brex

The prime minister of Great Britain, Boris Johnson, has sent an unsigned letter to European Council President Donald Tusk, through which he has asked for the postponement of the Brex process after October 31st. He has attached this letter to another letter in which he has opposed this postponement. Indeed, [...]
In fact, the prime minister sent three letters to the EU: An unsigned copy of the application he was obliged to submit under the British Assembly's decision, a detailed letter of the British ambassador to the EU, and a personal letter showing why he was opposed to Brex's postponement.
In the signed letter, he warned that Brexing Brex would have an effect “player” and that it would harm the interests of the United Kingdom, its partners in Europe and the relationship between Britain and European states.
He added that the British assembly has lost the opportunity to exploit the momenum for the ratification process of the agreement. However, he said he believes the Brexi legislation will be adopted in the assembly before October 31st.
Letters sent in the late hours of the night came after a busy day in the assembly, where British deputies approved by 322 votes “for” and 306 “against” the withdrawal of approval for the EU, forcing the prime minister to send a letter to Brussels at 23 o'clock to request a new extension of this process, this time until 31 January 2020, writes <x4The Guardian”, Report Express.












