Daily Mail

FURY OVER BILLIONAIR­E’S PLOT TO SABOTAGE BREXIT

With man who broke Bank of England set to pour MORE cash into campaign that threatens to bring down Mrs May...

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

GEORGE Soros was told to ‘butt out’ last night after it emerged the billionair­e is bankrollin­g efforts to keep Britain in the EU.

Senior Tories raised the alarm after the American financier confirmed he had donated more than £700,000 to groups working to water down or block Brexit.

Mr Soros famously bet against sterling on Black Wednesday in 1992 – earning him £1billion and the nickname ‘the man who broke the Bank of England’. The fiasco cost taxpayers £3.3billion.

Best for Britain, which has received £400,000 from Mr Soros, admits its campaign for a new referendum could cause the Government to fall.

The group should hand back the cash, according to Iain Duncan Smith.

The former Conservati­ve leader said it was wrong for foreign plutocrats to ‘undermine democracy’ in Britain.

Lord Lamont, a former Tory chancellor, said: ‘George Soros is a brilliant financier, but he should stick to finance and stay out of British politics.’

Conservati­ve MP Henry Smith said Mr Soros should ‘butt out’.

As Downing Street insisted Britain will leave the EU in March next year even if MPs vote down a divorce deal:

Best for Britain co-founder Gina Miller, who has since quit the group, said it had become ‘undemocrat­ic’;

Its leader said ditching the referendum result would be like abandoning a wet holiday in Cornwall;

Mr Soros was said to be so angry at the criticism that he was considerin­g a further six-figure donation;

It emerged that his money could be funding six UK organisati­ons, including

a parliament­ary group dedicated to watering down Brexit;

David Davis condemned EU threats to punish Britain if it stepped out of line during a transition period;

Cabinet ministers agreed to pursue an ‘ambitious’ trade deal with Brussels that would allow the UK to diverge from its rules.

Best for Britain made a presentati­on to six Tory donors at Mr Soros’s Chel - sea home this week , the Daily T elegraph reported. They were told the group aims to pressure MPs into voting down a Brexit agreement negotiated by Theresa May in the autumn.

A document circulated to those present said if they were successful ‘it is likely to trigger a new referendum, or election’. It added: ‘W e must prevail decisively, so reassuring Europe that our return will be permanent.’

The group, which is expected to launch a mass advertisin­g campaign next month, said it would use ‘ guerilla marketing tactics’. It said its aim was to ‘wake the country up and assert that Brexit is not a done deal. That it ’s not too late to stop Brexit’.

Best for Britain backers in attendance included Olympic rower and former Goldman Sachs banker Stephen P eel and Sir Martin Sorrell, head of advertisin­g firm WPP. None of the T ory donors at the presentati­on is thought to have pledged any money.

Mr Soros’s donations were revealed yesterday. Tory MPs said the Hungar - ian-born financier, who built up an £18billion fortune, had no right to try to undermine the result of the largest democratic exercise ever in Britain.

Mr Duncan Smith said: ‘However this is dressed up, George Soros is interferin­g in the British political system

‘I do have a problem with people taking money from wealthy non-British citizens to undermine the democratic process in this country.

‘They should give it back – if they can’t raise the money in this country then they should not be doing it.’

Henry Smith said: ‘George Soros has never been a friend of Britain ’s best interests. As a US citizen he should butt out of telling the UK they should remain under Brussels’ yoke.

‘Serious questions need to be asked as to how a foreign national can be funding a British political campaign.’

Jacob Rees-Mogg, a leading Conservati­ve Euroscepti­c MP, said the revela - tions underlined the need for Brexit supporters to keep making the case to leave the EU.

‘It is quite clear there is a lot of money behind the continuing Remain campaign and a lot of Establishm­ent support for overturnin­g Brexit,’ he added. ‘W e must keep making the argu - ments that Britain will be better off out of the EU.’

One pro-Brexit minister said Remain forces were trying to ‘demoralise’ the British public and ‘delay’ Brexit in the hope of overturnin­g it.

‘This Tory is MP more P eter evidence Bone added: of an Establishm­ent push to over - turn the referendum result.

‘It is being run by people who take the view they know better than the British people and that the people who voted for it are stupider than they are.

‘That is the complete reverse of the truth. This is a significan­t push being orchestrat­ed in secret and bankrolled by very wealthy individual­s. No one should think that winning the referendum guarantees Brexit will be delivered.’

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said Mr Soros was entitled to fund political cam - paigns. But he insisted that Mrs May would not be deflected from her pledge to respect the referendum and lead Britain out of the EU next year.

He confirmed that the Commons vote this year would be a question of ‘ deal or no deal’, adding: ‘The PM’s position is clear. The country voted to leave, that is what we are going to deliver and there will not be a second referendum.’

Sources at Best for Britain yesterday denied claims that the group has operated in a ‘shadowy’ manner, saying it had always been clear about its aim of stopping Brexit. As well as running its own campaign, the group is planning to fund other anti-Brexit organisati­ons, including Open Britain. It also funds the all-party parliament­ary group on EU relations, which is working to water down Brexit in parliament. Prominent members include former Tory minister Anna Soubry and former Labour cabinet minister Lord Adonis, who has pledged to ‘sabotage Brexit’. Mr Soros has also committed tens of thousands to European Movement UK, Bright Blue and Scientists for the EU . He has spent millions promoting democracy movements around the world through his Open Society Foundation.

In a statement last night the foundation said its grants to anti-Brexit campaigns were in line with its ‘worldwide mis - sion to build vibrant and tolerant democracie­s whose government­s are accountabl­e to their citizens’.

The group’s president Patrick Gaspard added: ‘ A fundamenta­l principle of open societies is that people get to decide how they are governed, knowing exactly what they stand to gain and what they stand to lose.’

Miss Miller said the public had a right to know who was backing Best for Britain. Lord Malloch- Brown, who chairs the group, told the BBC that MPs should ignore the refer - endum result and vote down whatever deal Mrs May secures with Brussels.

He suggested that reversing the referendum result because of fears the economy would suffer was comparable to simply changing holiday destinatio­ns because of the weather.

He said: ‘It’s like being told let’s go to Cornwall for a beach holi - day and it ’s going to be sunny and it rains every day and you’re allowed to change your mind.

‘There are a lot of people out there terribly frustrated, grow - ing in numbers. So we’re putting together a campaign which is actually democratic in its fund - ing too, It’s got some big donors including I’m very proud to say George Soros but also thou - sands of small donors as well.’

He said his goal was to ‘mobilise public opinion in favour of Remain in order to bring that change in public opinion to bear on parliament when it has the meaningful vote on Mrs May’s Brexit package some - time at the end of this year’.

He claimed the referendum had betrayed British democracy, adding: ‘I wish MPs would take responsibi­lity for this and would be willing to vote on their conscience and their knowledge of the issues and then face their electors at the next election.’ He insisted he was trying to empower rather than subvert democracy.

‘They think they know better’

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