Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Brexit save jobs

Barnsley gives Jezza the chop over ‘U-turn betrayal of voters’ Corbyn’s backing for customs union could help Tory rebels topple the PM

- BY DAN BLOOM Political Reporter

Jeremy Corbyn’s Great European Policy Switch went down like the falling wet snow in Labour’s heartland yesterday. Shoppers in Barnsley market in South Yorkshire didn’t warm to his conversion to “a customs union” with the EU after Brexit.

This is devout Leave country, where almost 70% of voters said “Out”. If the new message is to gain traction, it has to be among these ranks of traditiona­l Labour.

But a poll of people taking shelter from the snow showed not even Jezza’s vague promise of “a” customs union has changed minds.

The last union that was popular here was the National Union of Mineworker­s, and look what happened to that.

Ex-miner Brian Wilson, 68, walking his dogs in the biting east wind, said: “I don’t think it’s necessary to adopt this policy. I think we can trade with anybody.”

Mike Greenwood, a 64-year-old chemicals compliance officer, was more critical.

“It’s a pragmatic idea that he’s come up with, to keep the advantages of a single union but without the disadvanta­ges,” he said. “I don’t think the Europeans are going to have any truck with that. What advantage is it to them?

“If this is what he’s trying to do, it’s opportunis­tic rather than principled. He may be principled in many ways, but he’s trying to take government by dividing the Tory party and splitting their vote. It’s fairly cynical.”

Veteran Labour MP Frank

Field greeted the Corbyn conversion on the road to Brussels as “an impossible dream” and “meaningles­s”, warning it could cost swathes of seats in Brexit-supporting Labour constituen­cies where voters feel betrayed. Judging by the mood in Barnsley, he touches on a raw political nerve.

Cook Anna Richardson, 36, said: “Everybody, well, a majority, voted out. You have to go by the majority. You can’t ask people to vote then go against their wishes. “Corbyn can’t make his mind up. No politician can make his mind up. We have decided, they should listen to us.” Penistone shopper Susan Ball said: “We opted to come out and stand on our own feet. Jeremy Corbyn is doing a U-turn. He hasn’t got the strength of character, so I’m apprehensi­ve about him.”

I heard similar views in Barnsley market the day after the Euro referendum. But Labour went on to win all the seats in the area despite local MPS being Remainers. So too much should not perhaps be read into a sample of the public on a winter’s day. Even so, it’s still disconcert­ing to hear just how vehement they THERESA May could face being toppled by Tory rebels after Jeremy Corbyn sided with them on Brexit in a major policy shift.

The Labour leader yesterday unveiled plans for a “new and comprehens­ive” permanent customs union agreement with the EU after we quit the bloc.

He said the plan, welcomed by business groups, would keep “full tariff-free access” to EU markets, save jobs and avoid a hard border in Northern Ireland.

Mr Corbyn said: “We will remain close to the EU, that’s obvious.”

The move means Labour could back a cross-party amendment to the Prime Minister’s Trade Bill to enforce the idea, prompting a Commons showdown.

Tory Remainers downplayed the idea can be. Cafe worker Gillian Austin, 48, said: “Corbyn’s policy is to get with the Tory rebels so he can get the Government out. It’s more a political move to oust Theresa May.

“I think less of him after this U-turn because he seems more to be saying what people want him to say. He’s determined to be the next Prime Minister.”

Not even the only genuine European I could find was willing to back the Labour leader. German Manfred Richter, peering out from a haberdashe­ry stall, said: “I wouldn’t trust him. He changes his mind every few months. He’s not honest.”

Neighbouri­ng sweets stallholde­r Rod Ashton wanted “nowt to do with Corbyn. He’s a waste of space. He doesn’t know what he’s talking about”.

It’s not all bad vibes for Jezza. This is, after all, where they still weigh Labour votes, not count them. Sitting at a cafe, pensioner Kathleen Lowndes insisted: “I really like Jeremy. I approve of what he does. We have to have some kind of connection with Europe. We should have stayed in.”

Companion Ron Lawrence, 75, was still of the “out, definitely” view, but not “completely out.” “I don’t think we can drop out and have nothing to do with Europe – but we should be able to rule our own country.”

Overall, a troubling snapshot of opinion for Labour. The snow didn’t settle in Barnsley, and Jeremy Corbyn’s Coventry speech didn’t seem to settle anything either. of voting with Labour and Stephen Hammond said: “We are a long way from that yet.” But ministers reportedly warned Mrs May last week there is a “very real threat” of defeat.

And spooked Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson claimed Mr Corbyn had “betrayed Leave voters because he wants to win a Commons vote”.

The Bill is thought to have been pushed back to April or May as Mrs May tries to win over MPS in a speech this Friday. Reports suggest she could turn the vote into a “confidence” issue, a gamble that would call the bluff of rebels – but potentiall­y force her out if she lost.

So far, she has only lost one Commons vote on Brexit. But she faced months of internal plotting after losing her majority in last year’s general election.

Mr Corbyn unveiled his vision in a speech at Coventry’s National Transport Design Centre. Under his plan, we would be unable to strike trade new deals with the rest of the world on our own – underminin­g a flagship Tory policy.

Instead, Mr Corbyn said we should negotiate deals in a partnershi­p with the

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 ??  ?? SNAPPY SPEECH Corbyn selfie with fan
SNAPPY SPEECH Corbyn selfie with fan
 ??  ?? MARKET MAN Rod Ashton
MARKET MAN Rod Ashton

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