London: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday again failed in his attempt to call for a snap election in December amid the political deadlock over the UK's departure from the European Union (EU).
Reacting to the results, Johnson said that his government will introduce a short bill calling for an early election on December 12.
What happened in the House of Commons
The resolution moved by Johnson got the support of 299 MPs in the British Parliament. However, 70 of them voted against it and large numbers of lawmakers abstained, meaning the resolution failed to get the mandatory two-thirds majority in the 650-member House of Commons, media reported.
Such a bill would need a simple majority, rather than the requisite two-thirds required as per the country's Fixed Term Parliaments Act, and could effectively override the current election law.
Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats will also move another bill in the House on Tuesday calling for an election. The party wants the snap election to take place on December 9.
Earlier, Johnson had said that the vote on December 12 was a part of his new Brexit timetable, adding he wanted to dissolve the Parliament after November 6 for poll campaigning.