Las Vegas Review-Journal

Loud Wales: Johnson’s Brexit ballyhoo falls flat

- By Jill Lawless The Associated Press

LONDON — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson visited Wales on Tuesday on a national tour to reassure voters that his push to leave the European Union “come what may” won’t hurt the economy and rip apart the U.K.

The move failed to convince currency markets, where the pound slid to a new 28-month low amid rising concerns about a chaotic no-deal Brexit.

A day after Johnson was booed in Scotland, he faced another tough reception from farmers, a group central to the Welsh economy, who fear economic havoc if Britain leaves the EU without a divorce deal. They say millions of sheep might have to be slaughtere­d if tariffs are slapped on lamb exports to the EU.

National Farmers’ Union President Minette Batters said Britain exports 40 percent of its lamb and mutton, most of it to EU nations.

“(If ) we’re tariffed out of the EU market, where does that 40 percent go?” she said.

Helen Roberts of the National

Sheep Associatio­n accused Johnson of playing “Russian roulette” with the agricultur­e industry.

Johnson’s government argues that leaving the 28-nation trading bloc and its Common Agricultur­al Policy will be “a historic opportunit­y to introduce new schemes to support farming” and will open up new markets for U.K. agricultur­al exports.

The government’s Wales Secretary Alun Cairns said “90 percent of global growth will come from outside of the EU.”

However, trade with the EU accounts for almost half of all British exports, and any new trade deals are years away.

Britain’s 2016 vote to leave the EU divided the country and also strained the bonds among the four nations that make up the U.K.: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

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