Cyprus Today

‘Labour will vote against Brexit plan’

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BRITISH opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn said on Wednesday Labour would vote against a Brexit deal based on Theresa May’s proposals, the strongest warning yet to a prime minister whose plan to leave the European Union is hanging by a thread.

On the final day of his party’s annual conference, Mr Corbyn sought to show he was ready to take up the reins of power, setting out details of what he called “a radical plan to rebuild” Britain, including the promise of a “green jobs revolution”.

Mr Corbyn also made a direct bid for the support of those outside the British capital who voted to exit the EU, often in frustratio­n at feeling left behind by a London-based elite, saying Labour was ready to take over the tortured Brexit talks.

Britain is not due another election until 2022, but Labour is preparing for a possible snap vote. Mrs May’s position, already precarious, was further weakened last week when the EU rebuffed her Brexit proposal, known as “Chequers”, which is also unpopular in her Conservati­ve Party.

Mr Corbyn, a veteran Euroscepti­c, said Labour respected the outcome of a 2016 referendum when Britons voted to leave the EU, in the biggest shift in foreign and trade policy in more than 40 years.

“As it stands, Labour will vote against the Chequers plan or whatever is left of it and oppose leaving the EU with no deal,” Mr Corbyn told a packed hall at the conference in Liverpool.

“And it is inconceiva­ble that we should crash out of Europe with no deal. That would be a national disaster. That is why if parliament votes down a Tory deal or the government fails to reach any deal at all we would press for a general election,” he said to a standing ovation.

Brexit divides Labour just as it does Mrs May’s Conservati­ves and much of the country but Mr Corbyn has tried to paper over his party’s splits by keeping open the option of holding a second referendum on staying in the EU.

His words were greeted with chants of “Oh Jeremy Corbyn”, a popular refrain since 2015 when he became leader of Labour, a party which seems to be growing in confidence after months of rows over anti-Semitism and other issues.

Mr Corbyn has presided over a marked move leftwards in policy, breaking with what he described as the “greed-is-good, deregulate­d financial capitalism” that led to the 2008 financial crisis. He accused politician­s, including in Labour, of failing to make “essential changes to a broken economic system”.

“That’s why Labour is offering a radical plan to rebuild and transform Britain,” he said.

Mr Corbyn pledged to create more than 400,000 skilled jobs by investing in technologi­es to cut net carbon emissions by 60 per cent by 2030, and to zero by 2050, a move the Conservati­ves criticised as Labour’s “37th unfunded promise”.

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