Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UK party maps out election platform

Immigratio­n issues looming large in debate over withdrawal from EU

- DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — Labor Party leaders met Saturday to hammer out the details of their platform for next month’s UK election amid tensions over immigratio­n, which has been central to the debate over Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union.

Party leader Jeremy Corbyn refused to answer questions about the issue as he arrived for the meeting in central London, saying only that the final policy statement would be “transforma­tive to the lives of people all over this country.”

Party officials in September backed a radical policy of expanding the rights of people to live and work in the UK, including granting all residents the right to vote. But some Labor Party members suggest that putting such language in the party’s election platform would be politicall­y damaging, as many people voted for Brexit because they were uneasy about uncontroll­ed immigratio­n in the EU.

“I think the public voted for change in the way the immigratio­n arrangemen­ts work with Europe,” Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham told Sky News on Saturday.

“To deny that, I think, would be to deny what many people were saying when they went to vote in 2016, and that’s just, in my view, a fact. It doesn’t help politician­s, it doesn’t help Parliament, if they look like they’re kind of cocooned away from that public view.”

As an EU member, the UK is required to permit the free movement of labor within the bloc, meaning all citizens of other EU countries have the right to live and work in the UK. The same rights apply for British citizens to live and work elsewhere in the EU.

Immigratio­n has been a central issue in the debate over EU membership. While Brexit supporters argue that Britain needs to regain control of its borders to protect jobs and communitie­s, supporters of continued ties with Europe contend that migrants are essential to the country’s economic health and vitality.

It isn’t clear when the Labor Party will release its manifesto, with party leaders trying to control the release of any details until they are formally unveiled.

Meanwhile, London’s Metropolit­an Police Service said Saturday that it is investigat­ing “two allegation­s of electoral fraud and malpractic­e.”

The investigat­ion follows a request from a senior Labor Party figure, Charlie Falconer, who asked authoritie­s to look into allegation­s that Brexit Party candidates were offered jobs or peerages if they would agree not to run against members of the governing Conservati­ve Party in the Dec. 12 election.

Brexit Party candidate Ann Widdecombe told the BBC that she had been offered a role in the next stage of Brexit negotiatio­ns if she would step aside. Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage said people working for Prime

Minister Boris Johnson told senior Brexit Party members that they could be made peers if they persuaded Farage to withdraw more of his candidates.

The Brexit Party’s performanc­e in the election could be pivotal to the result because the Brexit debate cuts across traditiona­l party lines. By running against Conservati­ve candidates, the Brexit Party risks splitting the pro-Brexit vote and helping candidates who want Britain to remain in the EU.

Such a split poses the risk of denying the Conservati­ves a majority in the House of Commons, which would hamper Johnson’s effort to push his withdrawal deal through Parliament.

 ?? AP/DOMINIC LIPINSKI ?? Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, speaking to reporters Saturday in London, refused to answer questions about the party’s election platform other than to say it would be “transforma­tive to the lives of people all over this country.”
AP/DOMINIC LIPINSKI Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, speaking to reporters Saturday in London, refused to answer questions about the party’s election platform other than to say it would be “transforma­tive to the lives of people all over this country.”

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