Boris Johnson has announced that he will approach parliament to help plans for a snap general elections in October after an embarrassing defeat in his first House of Commons vote as the Prime Minister.

Former Cabinet Ministers, Philip Hammond, and David Gauke were among the 21 Conservative rebel leaders who together with the opposition MPs took control of the parliamentary timetable in Westminster.

The planned move was aiming for a bill tabled by the Labor backbencher Hilary Benn, which is intended to obstruct a no-deal Brexit by compelling the PM to demand an extension to article 50 if he can’t hit a modified deal with the EU27. The Guardian news reported.

The Commons voted 328 to 301 to seize control of the plan, suggesting they can bring forth a bill seeking to delay the UK’s exit date, 31 October.

Earlier the Prime Minister had depicted the legislation, drawn up by a cross-party alliance including the senior Tories Oliver Letwin and Dominic Grieve, as “Corbyn’s give up bill.”

After his dramatic defeat in the parliament, Johnson said he could never demand the postponement mandated in the rebels’ bill. He added, he would “hand charge of the negotiations to the EU.”

Boris Johnson also said that he doesn’t want elections and neither the citizens of UK, but if the rebel MPs pass the bill on Wednesday, he stated, “the citizens of this nation should pick” an election that could take place in coming October.

The PM will require a 66% majority to verify a general election under the Fixed-term Parliaments Act, and Jeremy Corbyn rapidly clarified his party would not decide in favor of the movement except if and until the counter no-deal bill had passed.

According to the Guardian news, the Labor chief stated, “Get the bill passed first to take no-deal off the table.”

Johnson held a string of meetings with rebels on Tuesday trying to convince them that he was determined to strike a new Brexit deal with the EU and the MPs will also get much time to discuss and approve it.

However, many Tory leaders seem to be encouraged rather than deflected by the fear of losing the party whip for the rest of the parliament – and by Johnson’s decision a week ago to suspend parliament. As per BBC’s senior journalist, the legislature was composing the circumstance as the Labor chief attempting to block Brexit, and that would be its argument looking forward into a general election. The BBC reported.