The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Johnson hails ‘glorious’ Brexit as G20 issues warning

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LONDON: London Mayor Boris Johnson on Friday launched a scathing attack on Brussels, urging Britons to vote for a ‘glorious alternativ­e’ free from “the whims of unelected bureaucrat­s”, as official campaignin­g began ahead of a referendum on Britain’s EU membership.

With G20 leading economies warning of the threat to global growth if Britain voted to leave, Johnson told a rally in Manchester, northwest England, Britain could thrive outside the bloc.

Activists from both camps hit the streets Friday, firing the starting gun on a tense battle over the nation’s future, the British people’s first direct say on Europe in 41 years.

“It’s time for us in this country to speak up for millions of people around Europe, tens of millions, who think like we do, who share our anxieties, who are fed up with the remoteness of Brussels,” Johnson told the crowd.

“If we hold our nerve and we’re not cowed and we vote for freedom and we vote for democracy on June 23 then I believe this country will prosper and thrive as never before,” he said.

Opinion polls suggest the British public is evenly split 10 weeks ahead of the vote, which could bring down Prime Minister David Cameron and plunge one of the world’s leading economies into uncertaint­y.

G20 finance ministers meeting in Washington listed Brexit among other factors that “complicate the global economic environmen­t”, a day after IMF chief Christine Lagarde urged Britain and the EU to save their ‘long marriage’ through dialogue.

In the ‘Remain’ corner is Cameron, who says Britain has a “special status” within the EU thanks to a renegotiat­ion he sealed in February, and that the country will be richer and stronger if it stays in.

In Covent Garden in the heart of rain-soaked London, antiBrexit volunteers were handing out leaflets to workers during their lunch breaks Friday.

“Financiall­y, it would be a disaster if we left the EU,” said Gael Simmonds, wearing an ‘I’M IN’ t-shirt.

Robin Phelps, 38, added: “There is a narrative saying ‘In’ voters are not so enthusiast­ic. I’m not sure that’s true because I think when the reality dawns that it can be risky, they’ll turn out.”

However, John Curtice of Strathclyd­e University, Britain’s leading poll expert, said the evidence available so far consistent­ly points to ‘Leave’ voters ‘being keener to make it to the polls’.

“We absolutely think we’re going to win it,” Peter Reeve, a spokesman for the UK Independen­ce Party (UKIP), told AFP as he campaigned in Peterborou­gh — a market town in eastern England where an influx of East European workers has angered many locals.

Overall, the ‘Remain’ and ‘Leave’ camps are neck-and-neck on 50 per cent support, according to a poll of polls run by academics at the What UK Thinks project, with around one fifth of voters undecided.

Cameron has said he is confident of winning the poll, despite the opposition of ministers in his own government and around of a third of his Conservati­ve Party MPs.

“Remain” supporters can also count on the backing of US President Barack Obama, who will head to London next week to join an internatio­nal chorus of leaders imploring Britain not to leave the EU. — AFP

 ??  ?? London Mayor and Conservati­ve MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip, Boris Johnson (centre) addresses campaigner­s during a rally for the ‘Vote Leave’ campaign, the official ‘Leave’ campaign organisati­on for the forthcomin­g EU referendum, in Manchester,...
London Mayor and Conservati­ve MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip, Boris Johnson (centre) addresses campaigner­s during a rally for the ‘Vote Leave’ campaign, the official ‘Leave’ campaign organisati­on for the forthcomin­g EU referendum, in Manchester,...
 ??  ?? BORIS JOHNSON
BORIS JOHNSON

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