KEY POINTS
  • The U.K.'s government under new Prime Minister Boris Johnson has stepped up planning and funding for a no-deal Brexit.
  • Johnson won a Conservative Party leadership race last week to become the new leader of the U.K. and throughout his leadership campaign Johnson had promised a tough approach to Brexit proceedings.
  • Many feel that contingency plans will not be enough to mitigate the fallout from an increasingly likely abrupt departure from the EU.
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson meets engineering graduates on the site of an under-construction tramline in Stretford on July 27, 2019 in Manchester, England.

The U.K.'s government under new Prime Minister Boris Johnson has stepped up planning and funding for a no-deal Brexit, but many feel that contingency plans will not be enough to mitigate the fallout from an increasingly likely abrupt departure from the EU.

Johnson won a Conservative Party leadership race last week to become the new leader of the U.K. and throughout his leadership campaign Johnson had promised a tough approach to Brexit proceedings, saying the U.K. would leave the EU by a deadline of October 31 "do or die, come what may."