The Hamilton Spectator

U.K. referendum campaign resumes in earnest with vote near

Both sides toned down the rhetoric on Sunday

- GREGORY KATZ

Britain’s long and difficult referendum campaign has resumed in earnest after a three-day halt caused by the killing of Labour Party lawmaker Jo Cox in a brazen knife and gun attack.

The death has cast a pall over the referendum set for Thursday, and its impact on the eventual results — if any — is unclear.

The campaign tone was, perhaps, a bit more moderate Sunday as both sides in the bruising battle over whether Britain should remain a member of the 28-nation European Union seemed to take a more civil approach.

The content remained the same: the “remain” camp predicts economic doom if Britain leaves the EU while the “leave” campaign warns of the perils of uncontroll­ed immigratio­n unless Britain strikes out on its own.

Prime Minister David Cameron, leading the “remain” campaign, invoked Cox’s memory as a contrast to the values of some of the “leave” campaigner­s, singling out UK Independen­ce Party chief Nigel Farage for taking a negative approach.

In a newspaper column, he said Cox — who favoured EU membership, and wanted Britain to do more to help Syrian refugees — offered a hopeful vision for Britain while Farage wants to divide the country, not unite it.

With the resumption of campaignin­g, including a London rally featuring former mayor Boris Johnson, a popular “leave” figure, fresh attention was focused on a poster unveiled by Farage’s supporters hours before Cox was killed.

The poster showed a long line of immigrants fleeing poverty and warfare in the Middle East and elsewhere trudging across Europe with a warning that said: BREAKING POINT. In smaller type, it accused the EU of failing Britain. The poster has been cited by politician­s and commentato­rs as a prime example of how jarring the tone of the referendum campaign has become.

Treasury chief George Osborne Sunday called it “vile” and compared it with Nazi propaganda of the 1930s.

Even Justice Secretary Michael Gove, a prominent leader of the “leave” campaign, decried the poster. He said he “shuddered” when he saw it.

Farage did not apologize for the provocativ­e image, but he conceded that the Cox killing, which he called an act of terrorism, may have blunted the “leave” campaign’s momentum at a key moment just days before the vote.

He blamed the tragedy on “one person with serious mental issues” and said he does not know how the public mood will sway in the next four days.

A range of public opinion surveys suggest the race is close.

The Cox case is likely to remain in the public eye because Thomas Mair, accused of murdering her, is scheduled to appear in court Monday.

Parliament will also meet in special session to give fellow lawmakers a chance to honour the youthful mother of two who had only served a short time before she was stabbed and shot to death.

With so much sadness in the air, one group introduced a bit of levity into the debate over Britain’s ties to the vast continent that lies across the English Channel by holding an “Anglo-European kiss-in” near Parliament Square.

The goal was to show love between Britain and Europe, with similar events held in several other European capitals.

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