The Citizen (Gauteng)

Johnson, Corbyn face off

BRITISH ELECTION: BATTLE LINES DRAWN BETWEEN MAIN PROTAGONIS­TS

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Opinion polls suggest Conservati­ves in the pound seats.

On the day Britain was supposed to have left the European Union, voters instead faced the start of an election campaign, with opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn pledging to overthrow a “rigged system” he said was run by billionair­es and tax dodgers.

After failing to deliver Brexit by the October 31 deadline, Prime

Minister Boris Johnson called the December 12 election to break what he cast as a political paralysis that had thwarted Britain’s departure and undermined confidence in the economy.

Opinion polls suggest the election is Johnson’s to lose. His Conservati­ve Party is leading Labour by 15 to 17 percentage points, according to IpsosMORI and YouGov.

Yet the overshadow­ing issue of Brexit, which has divided both major parties and their voters, could confound convention­al calculatio­ns.

While Brexit frames the election, with Labour pledging to hold a second referendum on it, it is being fought by two of the most unconventi­onal British politician­s of recent years, who offer starkly different visions for the world’s fifth-largest economy.

In his first major speech of the campaign, Corbyn said the election was a once-in-a-generation chance to overthrow what he cast as a corrupt elite which profited by exploiting workers, lying to the public and polluting the environmen­t.

“Together, we can pull down a corrupt system and build a fairer country that cares for all,” said Corbyn, a 70-year-old veteran socialist campaigner.

“Even if the rivers freeze over, we’re going out to bring about real change for the many, not the few.” Corbyn named prominent billionair­es such as landowner Hugh Grosvenor, Sports Direct owner Mike Ashley, Ineos CEO Jim Ratcliffe, hedge fund manager Crispin Odey and US media tycoon Rupert Murdoch as representa­tives of Britain’s “rigged system”.

He proposed nationalis­ation of rail, mail and water services. and higher taxes on bankers who have made London the pre-eminent internatio­nal financial capital.

Ashley, one of the businesspe­ople targeted by Corbyn, hit back, saying the Labour leader was “not only a liar, but clueless.”

IpsosMORI said the Conservati­ves were on 41% with Labour on 24%.

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