The Welland Tribune

With Brexit vote looming, Brits on both sides rally in London

- BENJAMIN MUELLER AND ELLEN BARRY

LONDON — Protesters from Britain’s right and left took to the streets Sunday, offering starkly different visions of the country’s future as the government scrambled to salvage its unpopular plan for exiting the European Union.

In a march led by the antiIslam activist Tommy Robinson, thousands waved the Union Jack and chanted, “We want Britain out.” Many waved signs accusing Prime Minister Theresa May of treachery, and one man carried a 10-foot noose, telling a reporter, “That’s what the traitor May deserves.”

One way or another, the marchers promised, the Conservati­ve Party would be punished for not fully severing ties with the European Union.

“The men in black, the establishm­ent, are doing everything they can to keep it from happening,” said Rob Wood, 55, who had travelled from Oxford for the march. “If the Tories don’t follow it through, they won’t get elected again for another 20 years.”

A couple of miles away, leftwing organizers gathered for a competing march to counter the far-right rhetoric. Carrying placards that said, “Stand up to Racism,” Brexit supporters and opponents alike warned that Robinson was trying to co-opt the economic grievances of austerity-hit Britain.

“They’re using Brexit to get more support from people feeling left behind,” said Lauren McCourt, 24, a member of the Bakers, Food and Allied Workers’ Union.

Standing beside her, Claire Trevor, 30, of Leicester, said the march was about proving, especially to young people, that Robinson represente­d a small minority of Britons, no matter how much attention he got.

“A lot of young people are scared,” Trevor said.

Parliament is expected to vote Tuesday on May’s plan for extracting Britain from the European Union. Some British news outlets reported Sunday that

May would try a last-ditch appeal to win more concession­s from EU leaders to mollify conservati­ves who want a cleaner split.

Those reports raised the prospect that the prime minister would delay the vote to avoid an embarrassi­ng defeat in Parliament. And support for a second referendum on Britain’s departure appeared to be gathering steam among both Labour and Conservati­ve lawmakers.

The grievances that fuelled the Brexit vote are simmering once more. Disappoint­ment may well inject new energy into the farright, said Tim Bale, a professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London.

“The prospect that Brexit would fix everything was enough for all but the most rabid xenophobe,” Bale said. “When people realize that it won’t stop the economy sucking in people to do the jobs that Brits can’t or won’t do, that it won’t stop people coming in via family reunificat­ion or asylum provisions, and that it won’t do anything to send home the millions of people here already, then there will be trouble.”

He added, though, that any embrace of violence or racism would consign the UK Independen­ce Party, which played a major role in building support for Brexit before the 2016 referendum, to “marginal irrelevanc­e.”

Already, the party has begun a drift toward the edges, appointing Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Christophe­r YaxleyLenn­on, as an official adviser.

Organizers of the anti-racism rally said that about 15,000 people had turned up to march, while UKIP put its crowd at “quite a few thousand.” The Metropolit­an Police in London, which sent scores of officers clad in helmets to monitor the marches, said they did not estimate crowd sizes.

 ?? ANDREW TESTA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Parliament is expected to vote Tuesday on Prime Minister Theresa May’s plan for extracting Britain from the European Union.
ANDREW TESTA THE NEW YORK TIMES Parliament is expected to vote Tuesday on Prime Minister Theresa May’s plan for extracting Britain from the European Union.

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