Sun.Star Cebu

Labour ponders support for new referendum

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Britain’s Labour Party opened its annual conference yesterday facing a huge choice—whether to change policy and call for a new referendum that could halt the country’s departure from the European Union.

The support of the main opposition party would be a major boost to campaigner­s for a second vote on Brexit.

Ever since the UK voted in 2016 to leave the EU, Labour has said it will respect the result—but it wants a closer relationsh­ip with the bloc than the one that Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ve government is seeking.

Now, with EU divorce negotiatio­ns stuck and Britain due to leave the bloc in March, many Labour members think the left-leaning party must change its course.

“Labour have to come to a decision. The time has gone for sitting on the fence,” said Mike Buckley of campaign group Labour for a People’s Vote.

More than 100 local Labour associatio­ns have submitted mo- tions to the conference, which starts Sunday, urging a “People’s Vote”—a new referendum—with a choice between leaving on terms agreed by the government or staying in the EU.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has long opposed the idea of such a vote. He told the Sunday Mirror newspaper, “I’m not calling for a second referendum.” But, he said, if Labour’s conference “make a decision, I will not walk away from it and I will act accordingl­y.” Deputy leader Tom Watson was even firmer. “We must back it if Labour members want it,” he told The Observer newspaper.

Labour faces a major political dilemma. Most of the party’s half a million members voted in 2016 to remain in the EU, but many of its 257 lawmakers represent areas of the country that wanted to leave.

“For Labour to adopt a second referendum policy would spell political disaster in all those Labour seats that voted leave,” said Brendan Chilton of pro-Brexit group Labour Leave. /

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