London: The United Kingdom's upper house of Parliament on Friday passed a bill that will force Boris Johnson's Conservative Party government to seek a Brexit extension and rule out a no-deal Brexit if it is unable to secure a deal with the European Union.
According to the media report, the House of Lords passed the bill unopposed as had been expected.
It had already made its way through the lower House of Commons in what was a major defeat for the PM and is expected to be written into law on Monday, just before Parliament is suspended for five-weeks.
It comes as another blow for Johnson, who has now effectively lost control of the parliamentary agenda.
Opposition MPs came together to submit the bill in a bid to force the PM into taking the option of a no-deal Brexit of the table. Johnson had held onto the possibility as leverage in the EU negotiations.
His decision to prorogue Parliament from mid-September to 14 October riled opposition MPs, who saw its as a move to prevent them from passing any legislation that would force his hand on the no-deal option.