The European Union's chief
Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, must go back to the bloc's leaders to change the terms of the talks because Britain's parliament will not accept the current deal,
British Brexit minister Stephen Barclay said on Sunday.
Writing in the Mail on Sunday newspaper, Barclay said the "political realities" had changed since Barnier's instructions were set after
Britain voted to leave the EU more than three years and that his mandate should reflect those differences.
Britain's new prime minister
Boris Johnson has pledged to leave the EU on Oct. 31 with or without a deal, and has told the bloc there is no point in new talks unless negotiators are willing to drop the so-called Northern
Irish backstop agreed with his predecessor Theresa May.