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British PM May makes plea for national unity

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Prime Minister Theresa May made a plea fo rnational unity over Brexit on Thursday as she toured Britain on the day that a one-year countdown to departure from the European Union begins.

May visited Scotland, England, Northern Ireland and Wales during her day-long tour, aiming to shore up support for the government’s Brexit strategy.

Brexit remains a fractious topic, with former prime minister Tony Blair leading a push for second referendum.

May kicked off the trip with a visit to a textile factory in Ayrshire, southwest Scotland, before travelling to Newcastle in northeast England to meet a parent and toddler group.

“Brexit provides us with opportunit­ies. I want to see us coming together, the four nations across the United Kingdom,” she told the Ayr gathering, insisting that “we will be leaving the European Union on March 29, 2019.”

May later stopped for lunch with farmers near Belfast in Northern Ireland before meeting Welsh business owners in Barry, then returning to London in time for tea with a Polish group.

“I am determined that as we leave the EU, and in the years ahead, we will strengthen the bonds that unite us,” May said before her visit. “I have an absolute responsibi­lity to protect the integrity of the United Kingdom as a whole.

TENSIONS

In a seismic referendum on June 23, 2016, 52 percent of voters in the UK opted for Britain to leave the European Union.

Most voters in England and Wales backed Brexit, while majorities in Scotland and Northern Ireland wanted the UK to stay in the EU.

There have been tensions between London and the devolved government­s in Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast over May’s handling of the Brexit negotiatio­ns so far.

Scotland and Wales last week backed bills to ensure that powers brought back from Brussels go to their capitals. Another sticking point is the Irish border as Britain leaves the European single market and customs union.

All sides in the Brexit talks want to avoid imposingc hecks at the frontier with the Republic of Ireland.

May has agreed to Brussels’ plan to keep Northern Ireland in the customs union if no better solution is found. However, the propositio­n is deemed unacceptab­le by the province’s pro-British and pro-Brexit Democratic Unionist Party, which props up May’s Conservati­ve minority government in the UK parliament.

‘Not too late’

Blair, who was Britain’s premier from 1997 to 2007, believes Brexit to be a giant strategic mistake and is a leading advocate for giving voters an opt-out. He argued that once the terms of its departure were known, voters should have the chance to choose whether they prefer that to EU membership.

“It’s not too late until we leave,” the former Labour leader told BBC radio. “We keep this under debate until we actually see the terms of the new relationsh­ip and then we can decide whether those terms are better than what we have now.” Writing in the pro-Brexit

Express, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who spearheade­d the official Leave campaign, said that in a year’s time, “Britain will be out of the European Union and re-engaging with the rest of the world. “Like an unstoppabl­e express, we are heading for Brexit, and frankly my friends, we can’t arrive soon enough,” he wrote.

“Our national journey out of the EU is almost over – and a glorious view awaits.”

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