Calls for Cameron to resign if Brexit prevails
Calls for Cameron to resign if Brexit prevails in country’s most divisive campaign
MILLIONS of Britons voted yesterday in a bitterly-fought, knife-edge referendum that could pull the island nation out of the European Union (EU) and spark the biggest crisis in the bloc’s 60-year history.
A record 46.5 million voters have registered to decide Britain’s future in the 28-nation EU, which was born out of a determination to unite in lasting peace after the carnage of two world wars.
Financial markets appeared to be banking on a “Remain” win, with stocks surging in London and the pound rising to its highest level against the dollar this year.
The rise came after an Ipsos Mori opinion poll for the Evening Standard newspaper released yesterday put “Remain” on 52% and “Leave” on 48%.
Other opinion polls have suggested a narrow lead for “Remain”, but well within the margin of error.
After a deeply divisive campaign, experts predicted a high turnout across the country, where polling stations have been set up at locations including churches, schools and even a launderette and a windmill.
Across London and southeast England, many voters braved torrential rain to have their say in a battle fought on two main fronts – immigration and the economy.
The referendum asks: “Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union?”
“Leave” advocates say a Britain cut loose from the EU will be able to rein in high levels of immigration and take back power from Brussels.
The “Remain” camp warns of a huge economic shock if Britain abandons the bloc.
Independent commentators have also suggested Brexit could trigger a constitutional crisis.
In one scenario, the United Kingdom could shrivel to a rump state of England and Wales if a pro-EU Scotland holds another independence referendum and Northern Ireland, facing a “hard border” with the Irish Republic, decide to quit.
World financial markets seemed to be banking on a “Remain” victory.
Financial institutions are reinforcing their trading teams to cope with the prospect of frantic round-the-clock trading and the world’s leading central banks say they are ready to react to any eventuality.
With no exit polls, the result was expected to start emerging early this morning.
In London, estate manager John Thompson, 57, was hoping for a “Leave” victory.
“It is just life, freedom and autonomy, and I don’t think I am going to get that under Europe – not the kind I want,” he said.
The often acrimonious campaign has exposed a wide gulf between Britons on the country’s often troubled four-decade membership of the EU.
British newspapers captured the high stakes of voting day.
“Independence day” was the headline of the pro-Brexit Sun, while The Times called it a “Day of reckoning”.
Prime Minister David Cameron, who faces calls to resign if there is a “Leave” victory, voted early without making any comment.
At his final rally on Wednesday, Cameron implored people to stay in the bloc, invoking Britain’s cigar-chomping wartime prime minister.
“Winston Churchill didn’t give up on European democracy ... and we shouldn’t walk away,” he said.
Nigel Farage, leader of the anti-EU UK Independence Party, said after he voted that “Leave” had “a really good, strong chance”.
“It’s all about turnout, it’s all about passion, it’s all about who cares enough to go out and vote,” he said.
EU leaders have warned Britons that there would be no turning back from a vote to quit.
“Out is out,” European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said this week, dismissing any talk of a post-vote renegotiation of Britain’s membership terms.
A British withdrawal from the EU would trigger a lengthy exit negotiation, leading to the loss of unfettered access to its partners in the EU’s single market and forcing the country to strike its own trade accords across the world.
In Brussels, the referendum has raised concerns of a domino effect of exit votes that would imperil the integrity of the bloc, already buffeted by the eurozone and migration crises.
EU leaders open a two-day summit on Tuesday to deal with the outcome and decide how to cope with the risk of similar referendums on the continent.