MPs reject attempt to seize control of Commons agenda in latest attempt to prevent no-deal Brexit
Sajid Javid brands Boris Johnson 'yesterday's man' as rivals launch leadership bids
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Your support makes all the difference.Labour has lost an attempt to block the possibility of any new prime minister forcing through a no-deal Brexit against MPs' wishes.
It came as Sajid Javid had a pointed dig at Boris Johnson as they launched rival Tory leadership campaigns, saying the former foreign secretary was "yesterday's news".
The home secretary positioned himself as a "new kind of leader", after Mr Johnson had pledged to end the Brexit "disillusion and despair" by taking the UK out of the EU on 31 October with or without a deal.
A shock poll suggested the Tory front-runner would win a general election landslide as prime minister.
The ComRes survey for the Daily Telegraph – which pays the former foreign secretary £275,000 for a weekly column – said Mr Johnson’s Tories would win 37 per cent of the vote, which the paper claimed would translate to a 140-seat majority following analysis by the Electoral Calculus website.
Please see what was our live coverage below
On the other side of the house, things aren't looking rosy...
Labour has been rocked by fresh infighting after a meeting with Jeremy Corbyn was described as so fractious that cleaners were “still mopping up the blood on the carpet”, writes Lizzy Buchan.
Labour MP Anna Turley said colleagues were “shell shocked” by the anger expressed at the weekly parliamentary Labour party meeting, as MPs tore into Mr Corbyn over the party’s handling of Brexit and internal complaints.
The row comes in the wake of a poor set of European election results for Labour, as well as anger over the decision by the equalities watchdog to launch a probe into antisemitism in the party.
Britain's high commissioner to Singapore has said ministers in his host country are "mystified" by the current political situation in the UK, it has been reported.
Politico reported Scott Wightman, who is leaving his post, as having said in a diplomatic cable that he and others had been forced to work "minor miracles for UK interests faced with the utter political shambles of Brexit".
Singapore's politicians were "mystified as to how our political leaders allowed things to get to this pass," he is said to have added.
He said: "The nation [Singaporeans] admired for stability, common sense, tolerance and realism grounded in fact, they see beset by division, obsessed with ideology, careless of the truth, its leaders apparently determined to keep on digging."
Liz Truss has defended Boris Johnson from accusations he is refusing to speak to journalists during his leadership bid.
She told the Today programme: "He has got nothing to hide... The important thing is he is talking to parliamentary colleagues."
The chief secretary to the treasury also backed Mr Johnson when asked on BBC Radio 4's Today programme about the time he was sacked for "lying in public" about an affair, saying: "I do not think the British public is interested in Boris' personal life."
She also denied the former foreign secretary was to blame for Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe's ongoing detention in Iran because of his error in stating she was in the country to train journalists.
She said "apologists for the regime" were blaming Mr Johnson. "The fact is he did a brilliant job in my opinion as foreign secretary," she added.
Speaking of Ms Zaghari-Ratcliffe, her plight features in our roundup of Mr Johnson's worst gaffes and mistakes.
A bit of light relief before things get serious later, courtesy of Rory Bremner.
When Michael Gove launched his leadership campaign he said “in serious times we need a serious leader”. In an obvious reference to Boris Johnson, he said we need “someone who is prepared to go under the studio arc lights… not hide in their bunker”, writes John Rentoul.
The tactic of hiding Johnson from media scrutiny has become obvious, with Westminster torn between admiration for the discipline shown by the team around the candidate in protecting his frontrunner status, and contempt for the cowardice of a potential prime minister refusing to face tough questions in public.
Certainly, his leadership campaign has shown a level of professionalism and organisation that was missing when he ran for the leadership three years ago, before he pulled out abruptly after Gove deserted him on the morning of his launch.
Increasing numbers of Britons are avoiding the news because Brexit items drag down their mood, a new report suggests, writes Jane Dalton.
More than a third of those questioned in the UK (35 per cent) were actively avoiding reading or hearing the news – a rise of 11 percentage points in two years.
Of those who shunned Brexit news, 71 per cent said they did so “due to frustration over the intractable and polarising nature” of the political debate.
Jo Swinson, the Liberal Democrat leadership hopeful, has tweeted: "No-deal would be a disaster, and it is irresponsible for Tory leadership candidates to pretend otherwise. That's why I will be voting for the cross-party motion to stop no-deal."
Theresa May has previously said no deal is the legal default if an agreement is not passed before the deadline comes around.
Sajid Javid is also due to launch his leadership bid today following the release of a slick, family-focused campaign video.
But the looming Commons vote on ruling out no-deal Brexit has forced him to push back the time of the event so he can go through the division lobby.
The home secretary is expected to tell the gathering: "I believe now more than ever that this is a moment for a new kind of leadership and a new kind of leader.
"A leader is not just for Christmas, or just for Brexit. "So we can't risk going with someone who feels like the short-term, comfort zone choice.
Boris Johnson is to scale back his planned tax cut for higher earners after Scots complained they could end up footing the bill, it has been reported.
The Tory leadership frontrunner had said that a national insurance hike would help pay for his £9.6bn plan to raise the 40 per cent rate threshold from £50,000 to £80,000.
But income tax rates are devolved to Holyrood, meaning that while Scots would not make any tax savings, they would pay extra NI, because that levy is set by Westminster.
Now The Scotsman reports "sources close to" Mr Johnson as saying that funding the giveaway in this manner couldn't happen, and that the tax cut may need to be smaller.
Unbelievably, or not, given the state of things, the Lorraine Kelly/Esther McVey saga is now into its third day.
Following a row with Ms McVey over an apparent snub to her former GMTV colleague, Ms Kelly has also said she strongly disagrees with the Tory leadership candidate's stance on LGBT rights.
In a swipe at the UK's political establishment, the (current) breakfast TV star has said that "there is something rotten at the heart of politics and it's annoyed me".
She added in an interview Good Morning Britain when grilled about the ongoing spat: "You don't want to get me angry, Piers, you won't like me when I'm angry."
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