Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Ex-PM Cameron says he is sorry for Brexit havoc

- Prasun Sonwalkar prasun.sonwalkar@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON:Former British PM David Cameron, who called a referendum over three years ago and then had to exit Downing Street in the aftermath of the verdict in favour of Britain’s exit from the European Union, on Saturday said he was “truly sorry” for all the uncertaint­y Brexit had caused. In an interview ahead of the publicatio­n of his memoir ‘For the Record’, Cameron told The Times the Leave camp’s victory had left him “depressed”.

LONDON: The UK prime minister who ordered the 2016 EU referendum and promptly resigned to his home in Oxfordshir­e when it threw up the vote to leave the group, surfaced on Saturday to apologise for the ensuing deep divisions, but insisted that he was right to hold it.

David Cameron, 52, was Britain’s youngest prime minister in 200 years when he entered 10 Downing Street in 2010 at 43, but left behind a withering legacy in 2016 that promises to unsettle the country for years. Speaking to The Times ahead of the release of his book, For The Record, he insisted he was right to hold the referendum, but claimed he is “truly sorry” at the uncertaint­y and division it has brought, admitting, “I failed.”

The referendum result, he said, left him “hugely depressed”, adding that he worries “desperatel­y” about the consequenc­es. Some people will never forgive him, he regretted, amid reports that bookshops in areas that voted to remain in the EU would not stock his 752-page tome.

Cameron criticised Prime Minister Boris Johnson for proroguing parliament and expelling 21 Conservati­ve MPs who voted with the opposition last week in the House of Commons.

Johnson’s insistence on leaving the EU without an agreement, he insisted, would be a “bad outcome”. The UK is currently due to leave the EU on October 31, but the deadline is clouded by intense politics in Westminste­r and legal challenges in courts.

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 ?? AFP/FILE ?? David Cameron (right) and Boris Johnson
AFP/FILE David Cameron (right) and Boris Johnson

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