Another man with the apparent gift of connecting with voters at the gut level.
The globalists and open borders crowd has to be quaking this morning on both continents.
Juxtaposed with the Communist circle jerk we're watching in DC, people are tired of the endless gridlock and endless investigations so "Get it Done" seems to be the current rally cry everywhere.
UK Parliament backs Brexit deal in decisive step toward leaving the E.U. on Jan. 31
LONDON — British lawmakers on Friday finally voted to back a plan to withdraw from the European Union.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson's bill, backed by a huge parliamentary majority, will take the country out of the 28-member bloc on Jan. 31, and lays the groundwork for sweeping foreign and trade policy shifts.
The 358-234 vote marks a significant breakthrough for Johnson, who stormed to electoral victory last week on a pledge to “get Brexit done.” The former mayor of London won the largest Conservative majority since Margaret Thatcher in 1987, confirming his position as prime minister after he took over from Theresa May in July.
Johnson's majority of 80 seats in the House of Commons meant he was able to pass the Withdrawal Agreement Bill — legislation that will implement the divorce deal hammered out with the European Union (EU).
Brexit is finally happening. On January 31. For real this time.
The United Kingdom has passed the legislation to make the current Brexit deal with the European Union official UK law, paving the way for the country’s exit from the EU on January 31.
The House of Commons — the lower, elected chamber once the source of endless Brexit drama — quietly and quickly approved the bill on January 9. The House of Lords, the unelected upper chamber, approved the legislation this week with amendments. But the House of Commons overturned the changes on Wednesday, and the House of Lords relented and agreed to accept the legislation without tweaks.
With Parliament agreed, the legislation received royal assent on Thursday, allowing the Queen to give formal approval to a British exit