Saskatoon StarPhoenix

3 Tories quit to join centrist group

INDEPENDEN­T GROUP

- JILL LAWLESS

Join ex-labour members in pro-eu group

• Brexit-driven cracks in Britain’s political party system yawned wider Wednesday, as three pro-european lawmakers quit the ruling Conservati­ves to join a new centrist group of independen­ts who oppose the Conservati­ve government’s determinat­ion to take Britain out of the European Union with or without a divorce deal.

Anna Soubry, Heidi Allen and Sarah Wollaston resigned to join eight ex-opposition Labour Party lawmakers in an alliance dubbed the Independen­t Group. The defections involve only a fraction of the 650 lawmakers in the House of Commons, but mark the biggest shake-up in decades for Britain’s political parties.

The breakaway lawmakers hope to gain members from disgruntle­d pro-europeans in both the Labour and Conservati­ve parties and forge a new force at the centre of British politics. They are inspired in part by the “En Marche” movement of French President Emmanuel Macron, which dominated France’s most recent presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections at the expense of the country’s mainstream parties.

“Both our parties are broken. We are going to #Changepoli­tics for the better,” the group tweeted Wednesday.

In a letter to Prime Minister Theresa May, the three ex-conservati­ves accused party leaders of abandoning the political centre, and said “the final straw for us has been this government’s disastrous handling of Brexit.”

Britain’s departure from the EU is scheduled for March 29 but no deal on divorce terms has been agreed on yet by British lawmakers. The three departing lawmakers accused May’s government of allowing the Conservati­ves’ hard-core pro-brexit wing to push the country to the edge of an economical­ly damaging “nodeal” exit from the bloc.

Allen said May had been “bullied into submission” by Brexiteers and was “dragging the country and parliament kicking and screaming to the edge of a no-deal abyss.”

Soubry said attempts to modernize the right-of-centre party by encouragin­g a more diverse membership and tackling social problems had been wiped out by the all-consuming obsession with Brexit.

“I’m not leaving the Conservati­ve Party — it has left us,” she said.

May said she was saddened by the decision, but said the government was “doing the right thing for our country” by implementi­ng voters’ decision to leave the EU.

The three join eight Labour rebels who quit the main opposition party this week over its direction under left-wing leader Jeremy Corbyn. The Labour defectors accuse him of mounting a weak opposition to May’s plans for leaving the EU and of failing to stamp out anti-semitism in the party.

Joan Ryan, one of the exlabour legislator­s, said the party had become “infected with the scourge of anti-jewish racism” under Corbyn, a longtime supporter of the Palestinia­ns.

Members of the Independen­t Group want to hold a new referendum on Brexit that could keep Britain in the 28-nation bloc. May’s Conservati­ve government opposes that idea, and Labour under Corbyn has been lukewarm about it.

 ?? CHRIS J RATCLIFFE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Former Labour MP Joan Ryan, left, links arms with former Tory MPS Heidi Allen, Anna Soubry and Sarah Wollaston after their resignatio­ns on Wednesday.
CHRIS J RATCLIFFE/GETTY IMAGES Former Labour MP Joan Ryan, left, links arms with former Tory MPS Heidi Allen, Anna Soubry and Sarah Wollaston after their resignatio­ns on Wednesday.

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