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Fury has erupted among Tory rebels after sources revealed the Prime Minister has cancelled his meeting wtih Remain-backing Tories over no deal Brexit concerns. Boris Johnson was due to hold peace talks with Remainers including former justice secretary David Gauke tomorrow.

But the meeting has been cancelled due to "diary issues". A one on one meeting with Mr Johnson has been offered to former chancellor Philip Hammond instead, sources said. However Mr Hammond reportedly declined the invitation from Downing Street. The news comes ahead of another pivotal week in the Commons and an expected clash when opponents of no deal look set to try to seize control of the parliamentary agenda to push through legislation delaying Brexit beyond October 31. The snub comes after Mr David Gauke said he would meet the prime minister on Monday to hear his plan to deliver a Brexit deal he could support.

Brexit news: Boris Johnson's meeting with Tory Remainers has been cancelled

Brexit news: David Gauke was due to meet Boris Johnson

But Mr Gauke warned he was prepared to disobey Conservative discipline and be expelled by the party if he was not persuaded. He told Sky News: "Sometimes there is a point where you have to judge between your own personal interests and the national interest, and the national interest has to come first. "But I hope it doesn't come to that." Asked if he planned to try to force through a Brexit extension beyond October 31, Mr Gauke said: "I think the detail will become very apparent in the next few days. READ MORE: Farage taunts Adonis on Leave alliance pact - 'I know who winners are'

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"But I think the important thing is that Parliament should not be excluded from this process. "I don't believe that no deal has a mandate from the 2016 referendum. I don't think it has got the support of Parliament. "And the problem is that if we don't act in this week, I think that it is likely that Parliament will be excluded from this process." Earlier today Labour Brexit spokesman Keir Starmer said Remainer MPs opposed to no deal Brexit would attempt to pass a law this week to stop Prime Minister allowing Britain to leave the EU on October 31 without a deal. DON'T MISS

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But Michael Gove refused to guarantee the government would abide by any such legislation. Pressed repeatedly on whether the Government would abide by a successful bid by Commons opponents to pass legislation preventing a no-deal withdrawal on October 31, Mr Gove told BBC One's The Andrew Marr Show: "Let's see what the legislation says. "You're asking me about a pig in a poke. "And I will wait to see what legislation the opposition may try to bring forward." "For me, the most important thing is to bear in mind actually, we already have legislation in place which an overwhelming majority of MPs voted for. "We already have an EU Withdrawal Act, we already have the notice on Article 50, the process by which we leave the EU."

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Mr Johnson held a strategy meeting with party whips and senior aides on Sunday in preparation for a tough week ahead. Opponents of no deal look set to try to seize control of the parliamentary agenda to push through legislation delaying Brexit beyond October 31. Shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer, who said he favoured legislation to prevent a no-deal scenario, branded Mr Gove's stance "breathtaking". He tweeted: "For ministers not to confirm that this Government will accept and comply with legislation lawfully passed is breathtaking. "The Prime Minister must make a statement on this straightaway. "No Government is above the law."

Brexit news: Boris Johnson attempted to schedule a meeting with Hammond

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