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Hundreds of thousands take to streets demanding 2nd Brexit vote

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LONDON/BELFAST — Hundreds of thousands of supporters of the European Union (EU) marched through London on Saturday in the biggest demonstrat­ion so far to demand that the British government holds a public vote on the terms of Brexit.

The protesters waved the blue and gold flag of the EU and held up “Bollocks to Brexit” banners under sunny skies to call for another referendum on the eventual deal on how Britain will leave the world’s biggest trading bloc.

The march comes after another tumultuous week for Prime Minister Theresa May in which she failed to agree a divorce deal with EU leaders in Brussels and infuriated members of her own party by making further concession­s in the talks.

With just over five months until Britain is due to leave there is no clarity about what a future trade deal with the EU will look like and some rebels in May’s Conservati­ve Party have threatened to vote down a deal if she clinches one.

James McGrory, one of the organizers of the march, said voters should have the chance to change their minds because the decision will impact their lives for generation­s. “People think the Brexit negotiatio­ns are a total mess, they have no faith in the government to deliver the promises that were made, partly because they cannot be delivered,” he said.

At the march, demonstrat­ors carried placards saying “Brexit is pants,” “Time for an EU turn” and “European and proud.” Organizers said about 700,000 people took part in the march, which would make it the largest in Britain since a demonstrat­ion against the Iraq war in 2003. The “People’s Vote” campaign, which includes several pro-EU groups, said they had stewards stationed at regular intervals to estimate the size of the crowd. The police did not provide an independen­t estimate of numbers participat­ing. Protesters originally gathered near Hyde Park and then walked past Downing Street and finished outside parliament where they listened to politician­s from all main political parties.

Britain’s 2016 referendum saw 52% vote in favor of leaving the EU. But the past two years have been politicall­y fraught as the government has struggled to agree on a plan and there are fears that Britain could leave the bloc without a deal.

In Belfast in Northern Ireland, around 2,000 people gathered on Saturday to oppose Brexit. Brendan Heading, a 39-year-old IT worker, said he was worried the decision to leave the EU would damage the economy and could lead to the break up of the United Kingdom. “I feel that Brexit threatens prosperity and stability,” he said. “People should have the opportunit­y to vote for an alternativ­e based on what we now know.” —

 ??  ?? A GIRL participat­es in an anti-Brexit demonstrat­ion at City Hall in central Belfast, Northern Ireland in this Oct. 20 photo.
A GIRL participat­es in an anti-Brexit demonstrat­ion at City Hall in central Belfast, Northern Ireland in this Oct. 20 photo.

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