Arab Times

Pro-EU candidate wins ‘Brexit by-election’

Britain’s Johnson stands firm on immigratio­n talk

-

LONDON, Dec 2, (AFP): Prime Minister Theresa May’s government suffered a rebuke over its plans to pull Britain out of the EU on Friday after voters in the London suburb of Richmond ousted a euroscepti­c lawmaker in favour of a pro-European candidate.

In a stunning upset, Liberal Democrat candidate Sarah Olney overturned a large majority to defeat Zac Goldsmith, who had held the seat for May’s Conservati­ve party since 2010, in a battle that became a mini-referendum on Brexit.

“Our message is clear: we do not want a hard Brexit,” Olney said as she became her party’s ninth MP with 49.68 percent of the vote, compared to 45.15 percent for Goldsmith.

“We do not want to be pulled out of the single market, and we will not let intoleranc­e, division and fear win.”

Goldsmith had resigned in protest at the government’s decision to back a new runway at London’s Heathrow airport, prompting a by-election in which he stood as an independen­t, although with Conservati­ve support.

The Lib Dems, who had previously held the seat, sensed an opportunit­y to win it back by focusing on Goldsmith’s support for Brexit, which was at odds with most of his constituen­ts.

Flooding the area with campaigner­s, they highlighte­d their demands for Britain to stay in the single market and for a second referendum on the final terms of Brexit.

“That message has been resounding­ly backed by the people of Richmond Park,” said party leader Tim Farron.

The Conservati­ve party did not field a candidate in Thursday’s by-election and offered its “commiserat­ions” to Goldsmith, who had been re-elected only last year with a 23,000 majority.

A spokesman said: “This result doesn’t change anything.

Committed

“The government remains committed to leaving the European Union and triggering Article 50 (beginning the formal exit process) by the end of March next year.”

Visibly downcast, Goldsmith acknowledg­ed the result with a brief statement that defended his decision to resign over Heathrow’s expansion, which is strongly opposed in west London due to noise and pollution concerns.

But the importance of Brexit was highlighte­d by the endorsemen­t of his campaign by the UK Independen­ce Party (UKIP), a leading force in securing the vote to leave the European Union in the June referendum.

In that vote, 52 percent of Britons nationwide voted out, while 69 percent of voters in Richmond Park opted to stay in. The defeat caps a tough year for Goldsmith, an environmen­tal campaigner and son of the late tycoon financier Jimmy Goldsmith, who founded the now defunct anti-European Referendum Party.

The 41-year-old lost his bid to become mayor of London in May in a bitter and divisive campaign that saw his party try to paint Labour’s Muslim candidate Sadiq Khan as an extremist.

Olney, 39, is a newcomer to politics -- an accountant who joined the Lib Dems only in May 2015.

But her victory is a huge boost for the party, which was almost destroyed in last year’s general election after five years in coalition government with the Conservati­ves.

Meanwhile, British foreign minister Boris Johnson, a leading Brexit campaigner, on Friday denied contradict­ing government policy on immigratio­n during private conversati­ons with EU ambassador­s, saying “we have to have control”.

Answering questions after his first keynote speech on foreign affairs, Johnson defended his support for free movement of people from the European Union -- which Prime Minister Theresa May has promised to end as Britain leaves the bloc.

“I’m a liberal internatio­nalist. I believe that immigratio­n can do great things and when I was mayor of this great city I saw the strength and dynamism that immigratio­n helped to give to the economy,” the former London mayor said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait