Amber Rudd, Britain's Minister for Employment and Pension Affairs, resigned on Saturday evening amid dissatisfaction with Johnson's exit policy. Two cabinet ministers later said Johnson was determined to "continue to leave Europe as planned" on October 31, regardless of whether a transitional agreement had been reached.
Johnson's desperate exit strategy before the deadline has been shaken by a series of events in recent days, with some criticizing him as a "bad dictator" and deepening uncertainty about how Britain will leave Europe.
He has lost his Conservative Party's parliamentary majority, expelled 21 defecting members of the Conservative Party and failed to pass the proposal for a re-election. His younger brother then announced his withdrawal from the government, saying he was in a dilemma between family loyalty and national interests.
Radh resigned on Saturday because she said the government was focusing too much on preparing for a no-agreement exit, which exacerbated the sense of crisis. Rudd advocated staying in the EU when Britain withdrew from Europe in a referendum in 2016.
Rad denied Sunday that he had lied about the government's efforts to negotiate a withdrawal agreement, saying he was just telling what he had seen and heard.
"What I'm talking about is that in terms of relations with the EU, I see 80-90% of the work being done in preparation for an agreement-free withdrawal. This is not proportionate."
"The reason for resigning is to prove that the Conservative Party should be a moderate party that can accommodate different views on EU issues."
But British Foreign Secretary Rabb refuted her view, describing the continuation of "intense negotiations" in Brussels and emphasizing that some people's so-called tough retreat strategy would not block the Johnson administration.
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