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EXPLAINER-Looking for loopholes: How could UK PM Johnson avoid delaying Brexit?

By Andrew MacAskill and Kylie MacLellan

LONDON, Sept 27 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said he will refuse to seek a delay to Brexit, raising suggestions he could try to exploit a loophole to bypass legislation aimed at preventing the country leaving the European Union without a deal.

Johnson has made what appears to be two contradictory statements: he will obey the law, but will not request an extension to Britain's scheduled Oct. 31 exit.

His most senior adviser Dominic Cummings said there are loopholes in the law because lawyers are debating them.

Under the so-called Benn Act if, by Oct. 19, the government has not won parliamentary approval for a divorce deal with Brussels or for leaving the EU without a deal, Johnson must request a delay until Jan. 31, 2020. The act even gives a text of the letter he must send.

So how could Johnson avoid a Brexit delay?

1) DOUBLE CROSS

Jolyon Maugham, a lawyer who is part of the legal team which defeated the government over its decision to suspend parliament, said a weakness of the law is that if a divorce deal is approved by parliament on, or prior to, Oct. 19, the obligation to request an extension will cease.

However, Maugham says further preconditions need to be met before the divorce deal can be ratified and no-deal avoided. In particular, a separate law implementing the withdrawal agreement needs to be approved by parliament by Oct. 31.

He said there could be a scenario where lawmakers pass the divorce deal on or before Oct. 19, and therefore Johnson is not required to write the letter, but then the subsequent legislation gets blocked in parliament and Britain leaves without a deal.

2) SUSPEND THE LAW Former Prime Minister John Major said Johnson may bypass the law by issuing an order to suspend it until after the scheduled date of departure.

Major said a so-called Order of Council could be passed by ministers without the involvement of parliament or the queen. He said this tactic would be "a piece of political chicanery that no one should ever forgive or forget".

3) GET EU TO REJECT EXTENSION REQUEST

The British government could comply with the letter of the law but not the spirit of it, by requesting an extension but seeking to get the EU to reject it.

It could do this in a number of ways:

a) Send a second letter - The law sets out the wording of the letter the prime minister has to send to Brussels to request the delay. British media have reported he was considering sending a second letter making clear the government does not actually want a delay. Legal experts have said any second letter is likely to be considered unlawful however.