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‘Corbyn like Stalin,’ says PM

Johnson kicks off UK general election fight

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson officially kicks off his election campaign today with a promise to “get Brexit done” in contrast to his main rival, whom he compared to Soviet leader Josef Stalin.

Britons will go to the polls on Dec 12 after parliament agreed to an early election last week, seeking to end three years of deep disagreeme­nt over Brexit.

The outcome of the vote is hard to predict, with the immediate question of Britain’s exit from the European Union (EU) scrambling voters’ traditiona­l loyalties and giving smaller rivals a chance to challenge the two biggest parties, Mr Johnson’s Conservati­ves and the left-of-centre Labour Party.

While Mr Johnson is keen to frame the vote as a means to sort out Brexit, domestic issues such as the future of the much cherished state-run National

Health Service will also be key.

“I don’t want an election. No prime minister wants an early election, especially not in December,” Mr Johnson wrote in an article for the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

“But as things stand we simply have no choice — because it is only by getting Brexit done in the next few weeks that we can focus on all the priorities of the British people.”

After paying a formal visit to Queen Elizabeth, Mr Johnson will return to his Downing Street residence to announce the election. He will launch his party’s campaign at a rally later in the day.

Polls show Mr Johnson’s Conservati­ves are well ahead of Labour, but polling analysts caution that sentiment is unusually volatile. Surveys suggested his predecesso­r Theresa May had a huge lead going into a snap election in 2017, only to see her parliament­ary majority wiped out. BAD START The Conservati­ves’ campaign has already got off to a bad start after minister Jacob Rees-Mogg apologised on Tuesday for suggesting victims of the blaze at London’s Grenfell Tower, which killed 71 people, should have used common sense to ignore firefighte­rs’ instructio­ns to stay in the burning building.

Yesterday the party was accused of putting out a doctored video clip of a television interview with a senior Labour politician.

Mr Johnson, 55, hopes he will win a big enough majority in parliament to get the Brexit deal he agreed with Brussels last month ratified and lead Britain out of the EU at the end of December or in January.

Attempting to capitalise on voters’ Brexit fatigue, more than three years after Britain voted 52% to 48% in favour of leaving the bloc, Mr Johnson will say at his campaign launch it was time to “get out of our rut”.

Britain had been due to leave in March this year, but has had to extend that deadline three times after parliament rejected a deal negotiated by Theresa May, and then forced Mr

Johnson himself to ask for more time.

His campaign will paint Labour’s veteran socialist leader Jeremy Corbyn as someone who wants to stall the Brexit process by holding another referendum, while also raising taxes and destroying prosperity.

“They pretend that their hatred is directed only at certain billionair­es — and they point their fingers at individual­s with a relish and a vindictive­ness not seen since Stalin persecuted the kulaks,” Mr Johnson wrote.

Millions of people were executed under Stalin and many more perished from abuse and disease in a vast network of prison camps, known as the Gulags. Relatively affluent farmers, known as kulaks, were among the groups targeted.

Mr Corbyn said on Tuesday he wanted to negotiate a new Brexit deal and then let the public decide between leaving on his terms, or not leaving at all. At his own campaign launch, he will say Labour would deliver real change and he was seeking power to share power.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Effigies of UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and leader of the House of Commons Jacob Rees-Mogg are paraded in Lewes on Tuesday.
REUTERS Effigies of UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and leader of the House of Commons Jacob Rees-Mogg are paraded in Lewes on Tuesday.

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