A group of British lawmakers, supporting the European Union, once again failed to prevent the UK from leaving the block without a deal after the Speaker of the House of Commons did not allow their proposal to be put to a vote.

Both candidates for the Prime Minister have said they will choose Brexit without a deal, if necessary. Boris Johnson promised Britain to leave the EU with or without a deal on October 31, while his opponent Jeremy Hunt said that if absolutely necessary, he would choose Brexit without a deal.

Former Prosecutor General Dominic Grieve of the Conservative Party and former Labor Party Foreign Minister Margaret Beckett proposed a corrigendum to a financial bill that would cut some of the government’s funds if May’s heir chose Brexit without a deal against the will of the parliament.

If elected, the proposal had to be voted on by MPs on Tuesday, but at the beginning of the debates, the opposition Labor Party announced that did not include any of the proposed amendments on the agenda.

The amendment sought to ban the allocation of funds to some government agencies if parliament did not ratify a deal or a withdrawal agreement with the EU, or if the deputies did not agree to leave the bloc without a deal.

This was another attempt by MPs to prevent leaving the country without agreement. Last month, the parliament thwarted the Labor Party’s attempt to take control of its daily agenda from the government to pass a bill aimed at blocking Hard Brexit.