Jeremy Corbyn would back Boris Johnson in calling a general election, regardless of whether the polling day falls before the Brexit due date, 31 October, the Guardian reported.

The Labor leader’s teams are assured a no-deal Brexit could be prevented by securing an extension from Britain’s EU members, even after the European Council meets later on 17 October.

PM Boris Johnson is broadly accepted to plot a snap poll if MPs attempt to prevent his Brexit plans – bypassing enactment compelling him to request expansion to article 50, for instance.

Nonetheless, under the Fixed-term Parliaments Act, the Prime Minister would require a 66% majority to order general elections before the following one, which is expected in 2022. Theresa May passed that obstacle effectively in 2017, with Labor ready to take her on at the polls. However, Nick Boles, a prior Conservative MP who has been engaged with cross-party endeavours to discover a Brexit deal, has encouraged Corbyn to preclude supporting general elections before an extension to article 50 has been verified.

Corbyn will have a meeting of other senior parliamentarians and top opposition party leaders on Tuesday, One week before the MPs come back to Westminster, as he attempts to put himself at the forefront to stop no deal.

Refusing the invitation, Boles wrote to the Labor leader requesting him to “proclaim openly that you won’t have an election before an extension of article 50 has been obtained, and a no-deal Brexit has been ruled out”.

Cracks have progressively appeared among those MPs focused on averting a no-deal Brexit. Jo Swinson, Liberal Democrat leader, argued that if Jeremy Corbyn won a vote of no confidence, then he should be ready to cede the administration of any caretaker government in place of another senior politician. On Sunday, the shadow trade secretary, Barry Gardiner, branded Swinson of being impatient.

Corbyn has proposed that if Labor wins a vote of no confidence, he will look to lead a caretaker government whose undertaking would be to demand an expansion of article 50 and later call a general election. Swinson has stated that Corbyn most probably won’t be able to command the majority.

Tom Brake, the Lib Dem representative on Brexit, stated: “Jeremy Corbyn will be under much load if he doesn’t focus on working with opposition leaders. If by chance, he doesn’t have the numbers to frame a crisis government, he should stand aside and help locate the best candidate. Respected member will suffice, from either side of the house.”

Corbyn cautioned that leaving without an agreement would permit the Brexit vote to be “highjacked” by the Tories’ wealthy benefactors.

“They will utilize the emergency to push through policies that advantage them and harm every other person, as they have since 2010. They will strive to diminish the influence of labourers, assurances for purchasers, the duty bills of brokers, the most extravagant and enormous companies, as well as guidelines that should stop them from misusing their position,” the Independent reported.

The Commons will be held for two weeks toward the beginning of September, before breaking indeed while the meeting holds their annual conferences. Labour will be hesitant to call a vote of no confidence until it is confirmed, it has the sponsorship of rebel Tories – some of whom have stated that they won’t support it while a Brexit agreement rests a probability.