The Scotsman

Labour faces huge pressure to back second referendum – Lammy

- David Wilcock

Jeremy Corbyn has been urged to throw his weight behind a second Brexit referendum, to unite the Labour movement and prevent an “economic catastroph­e”.

Senior Labour MP David Lammy said there was growing momentum for a so-called People’s Vote on the outcome of the Brexit negotiatio­ns.

He said the party leadership will come under “tremendous” pressure at the party’s conference later this month to back a second vote.

Labour has so far not ruled out a referendum on the terms of the Brexit deal, but senior figures including Mr Corbyn and shadow chancellor John Mcdonnell have argued that they would rather have a general election.

Despite Brexit being the

major political issue at Westminste­r, Labour has spent recent months mired in internal disputes over how to respond to claims of antisemiti­sm.

Former minister Mr Lammy suggested that publicly supporting a referendum could help the party move on from its divisions.

He said: “I think the irony of the European position is that is the big policy issue of our times.

“I actually think it could unite the party as there is a growing momentum.

“In the end no political party can expect to be the party of government if it is a party that is totally absorbed in internal issues and is divided.

“It has to be a united party, we need to get back to policy and the issue, the pressing issue in our country, is are we going to have a no-deal [Brexit] or are we going to have an extremely poor deal and the economic catastroph­e that flows from that. That is the critical issue and it really does need Labour now to understand that it can lead on this issue of a People’s Vote.”

Tottenham MP Mr Lammy said he believed that despite the clock ticking on Brexit – with just 200 days until the UK’S exit from the EU – there was both the parliament­ary time and cross-party support available to secure a fresh referendum.

“Of course Parliament has the space and the time to go back to the people, to draft legislatio­n, to devise the questions to give the British people a decision whether to

stay in the European Union or they accept the deal that is on the table,” he said.

“The EU itself has indicated that we actually would be able to have more time beyond March to do this. The Irish PM very recently indicated that is something that could happen.

“Of course our European partners would like to give the British people the opportunit­y to make that decisive decision if that is something we requested.”

Labour would be able to line up with the smaller parties and Tory rebels to get referendum legislatio­n through Parliament, he said.

“There is a growing momentum across the Labour movement, there will be tremendous pressure I think at party conference.”

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