London: Queen Elizabeth II on Wednesday approved UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson's order to suspend Parliament in the second week of September, just weeks before the Brexit deadline on October 31.
Johnson's surprise move to suspend Parliament prompted widespread criticism from the opposition amid accusations of a "coup" as it can prevent Member of Parliaments from voting to block a possible no-deal Brexit.
According to a statement from the Privy Council, a body of senior politicians who act as the Queen's official advisers, the Queen approved the suspension of Parliament "no earlier than Monday 9th September and no later than Thursday 12th September" until October 14.
The suspension comes just a week after MPs return from their summer recess and is intended for the government to hold a Queen's Speech on October 14.
In a letter to lawmakers, Johnson confirmed earlier in the day that he had asked the Queen to suspend the current parliamentary period. He rejected the idea that the motive behind his decision was to give lawmakers less time to stop a no-deal Brexit. He said that suggestion was "completely untrue", media reported.
"We need new legislation. We've got to be bringing forward new and important bills and that's why we are going to have a Queen's Speech."
Johnson said that he believed any vote in the House of Commons, the UK's lower legislative chamber, on the government's new programme or a possible deal with the EU should be done once his Cabinet's ambitions are clear and after the conclusions of a European Council meeting on October 17-18 are known.
The House is therefore set to be suspended from September 10 till October 14.
MPs will return to work on September 3 and Brexit, as Johnson has repeatedly said, will go ahead with or without a deal on October 31.
The decision prompted immediate and fierce protests from political leaders in the opposition whereas the Conservative Party's leadership played the move off as "normal government protocol".