Yorkshire Post

Welby rebukes Johnson over use of language

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THE ARCHBISHOP of Canterbury has taken Prime Minister Boris Johnson to task for his use of “inflammato­ry” language through the Brexit debate.

Justin Welby told The Sunday Times that there was a risk of pouring “petrol” on the country’s divisions on the issue of Britain’s departure from the European Union.

The Archbishop said Mr Johnson had come to symbolise a climate in which Britain had become consumed by “an abusive and binary approach to political decisions”, and where those with opposing views treated each other as “total” enemies.

In an era in which social media had made it “extraordin­arily dangerous to use careless comments”, and in which hate speech was on the rise, Mr Welby called for political leaders to take more care with their language.

He added his criticisms were not confined to Mr Johnson and his Government, but made clear he considered the Prime Minister partly to blame for the fact society had become “quite broken”.

Mr Welby told the newspaper: “I think we have become addicted to an abusive and binary approach to political decisions: ‘It’s either this or you’re my total enemy’.

“There have been inflammato­ry words used on all sides, in parliament and outside - ‘traitor’, ‘fascist’, all kinds of really bad things have been said at the highest level in politics.”

Mr Welby said he was “shocked” by Mr Johnson’s recent dismissal of concerns that extreme language could encourage death threats against politician­s as “humbug”.

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