THISDAY

Britons Vote on EU Membership after Bitter Campaign

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Britons yesterday voted on whether to quit the European Union in a bitterly-contested referendum that polarised the nation and could change the face of Europe. Financial markets, on edge for weeks over the uncertain outcome, rose on the strength of late polls that showed a swing towards staying in, but the bulk of recent polls have suggested the outcome was too close to call.

If Britain becomes the first state to exit the EU, the so-called Brexit would be the biggest blow to the 28-nation bloc since its foundation. The EU would be stripped of its second-biggest economy and one of its two main military powers, and could face calls for similar votes by anti-EU politician­s in other countries.

If it votes to stay, Britain has been promised a special status exempting it from any further political integratio­n but European leaders will still have to address a sharp rise in euro scepticism across the continent.

A Brexit vote would also deal a potentiall­y fatal blow to the career of Prime Minister David Cameron, who called the referendum and campaigned for the country to stay in, against a Leave camp led by rivals from within his own Conservati­ve Party.

After four months of campaignin­g, polling stations opened at 0600 GMT and were due to close at 2100, with results expected to be announced by the 382 individual local counting areas between around 0100 and 0300 on Friday. There is no exit poll because the margin of error for an event which has no precedent is too large. The only early indication will be a survey of a pre-selected sample of voters by YouGov, to be broadcast on Sky News shortly after 2100.

London and parts of southeast England were hit by torrential rain, causing floods and widespread transport chaos. Five London polling stations opened late as staff struggled to get there, and two closed briefly because of flooding but were quickly re-opened in back-up locations.

“In London/southeast and want to vote in the #EURef? Make sure you plan now to get back to your local polling station by 10pm!” the Electoral Commission said on Twitter, as crowds of frustrated commuters struggled with train cancellati­ons. The Leave campaign focused on warnings that Britain would be unable to control immigratio­n levels as long as it was an EU member. Remain said a Brexit would cause economic chaos, impoverish the nation and reduce its clout on the world stage.

The killing of pro-EU lawmaker Jo Cox, a 41-year-old mother of two who was shot and stabbed on a street in her electoral district in northern England a week ago, prompted soul-searching about the vicious tone of the campaign. Her suspected murderer told a court his name was “Death to traitors, freedom for Britain”. Campaignin­g was suspended for three days out of respect for Cox, resuming on Sunday.

An Ipsos MORI poll for the Evening Standard newspaper found support for Remain on 52 percent and Leave on 48 percent. A Populus poll put Remain 10 points ahead on 55 percent. Both were conducted on Tuesday and Wednesday and published yesterday.

Cameron called the vote in 2013 under pressure from the rebellious anti-EU wing of his Conservati­ve Party and the surging UK Independen­ce Party (UKIP), hoping to end decades of debate over Britain’s ties with Europe. Unless Remain wins by a wide margin, he could struggle to repair the rifts in his party and hold on to his job. He has said he would stay in office but in the event of a vote to leave he is likely to face calls to resign.

The bookmakers’ favourite to replace him is former London mayor Boris Johnson, figurehead of the Leave campaign.

A Brexit could also cause the United Kingdom to break up because Scotland, where sentiment towards the EU is much more positive than in England, could hold an independen­ce referendum if it was being dragged out of the EU against its will. Scots voted by 55 to 45 percent against independen­ce in 2014.

After months of non-stop tit-for-tat confrontat­ion between the sides, any substantiv­e debate was over on Thursday. Due to legal restrictio­ns, there were no large-scale campaign events and no television programmes rehearsing the arguments.

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