KEY POINTS
  • U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson's office has confirmed the British Parliament will be suspended for the next five weeks.
  • Critics claim the move is a bid to stifle opposition to a "no deal" Brexit.
  • Johnson met his Irish counterpart in Dublin on Monday morning.

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson's office has confirmed the British Parliament will be suspended for the next five weeks starting Monday, after Johnson visited his counterpart in Dublin to discuss solutions to a problem that bedevilled his predecessor Theresa May: how to reconcile an open border between Ireland and the UK, while allowing Britain to strike independent trade deals in the future.

Johnson's government had earlier received Queen Elizabeth's approval for the parliamentary suspension, in what critics insisted was a bid to prevent lawmakers from limiting the British leader's room to maneuver ahead of the current Brexit deadline of Oct. 31.