Belfast Telegraph

Second vote not an option for today: Corbyn

- BY DAN O’DONOGHUE

JEREMY Corbyn has poured cold water on calls for Labour to back a second referendum on the UK’s membership of the EU — saying it is “an option for the future” but “not an option for today”.

The Labour leader also revealed that if there was another referendum he did not know how he would vote.

Mr Corbyn, in an interview on Sky News, also told how his party “couldn’t stop” Brexit because of the parliament­ary arithmetic.

He said: “We couldn’t stop it because we don’t have the votes in Parliament to do so.

“There was a referendum in 2016, a majority voted to leave the EU, there are many reasons why people voted.

“I don’t think you call a referendum and then say you don’t like the result and go away from it, you’ve got to understand why people voted and negotiate the best deal you can,” he added.

Asked about calls for a second referendum, Mr Corbyn said: “It’s an option for the future but it’s not an option for today. If there was a referendum tomorrow what’s it going to be on, what’s the question going to be?”

On which way he would vote in such a referendum, he continued: “I don’t know how I am going to vote, what the options would be at that time.”

The Labour leader also trashed Theresa May’s Brexit deal, telling Sky News that it was a “one-way agreement” in which the EU “calls all the shots”.

He said: “We’ll vote against this deal because it doesn’t meet our tests.

“We don’t believe it serves the interest of this country, therefore the Government have to go back to the EU and renegotiat­e rapidly.

“There’s 500 pages in this document much of which is quite vague, where’s the guarantee on environmen­tal protection­s, where’s the guarantee on consumer protection­s, where’s the guarantee on workers’ rights?”

Mr Corbyn said Labour would focus on negotiatin­g a permanent customs arrangemen­t with the EU as, if this was not agreed, the UK would “lose on jobs, lose on investment and we lose on future economic developmen­t”.

Shadow attorney general Shami Chakrabart­i, appearing on the BBC, later said that Mrs May’s Brexit deal was “the worst kind of bureaucrat­ic fudge that doesn’t deliver for anyone”.

 ??  ?? Objections: Jeremy Corbyn
Objections: Jeremy Corbyn

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