Daily Mail

WE DID IT!

After YOU give him landslide, Boris lifts Britain’s spirits with soaring Christmas message of healing

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

BORIS Johnson pledged to unite the country and heal its Brexit divisions last night after securing a stunning election victory over Labour.

Speaking on the steps of No 10 after visiting the Queen, the Prime Minister said it was time to bring ‘closure’ to the three-and-a-half years of toxic argument over Britain’s departure from the European Union.

His pledge to ‘Get Brexit Done’ helped him rout Labour in its traditiona­l heartlands in the North and Midlands. The emphatic 80seat majority was the biggest Tory win since 1987.

Addressing the nation after delivering a political earthquake, Mr Johnson offered an olive branch to Remainers and said the country deserved ‘ a break from wrangling, a break from politics, and a permanent break from talking about Brexit’.

Wishing voters a ‘happy Christmas’, he said they could now go about their festive preparatio­ns ‘happy and secure’ in the knowledge that the Brexit crisis was being resolved, and that other priorities, such as the NHS, would move centre stage in 2020.

Next year, he said, would be ‘a year of prosperity and growth and hope’, promising a ‘ parliament that works for the people’.

The PM’s One Nation pitch to the country came as:

Sterling soared to a three-and-a-half year high as markets welcomed the decisive election result and the removal of the threat of a Labour government;

Jeremy Corbyn brushed aside

Johnson had secured a ‘tremendous victory’ that would result in ‘a lot of trade’;

Brussels warned the PM that he will have to revert to a softer post-Brexit relationsh­ip to get the trade deal he wants by the end of next year;

The People’s Vote campaign abandoned its bid for a second referendum, saying it would ‘rebrand and reorganise to campaign for a fair deal for Britain’;

The election returned a record 217 women MPs – more than a third of the total. More than half of Labour and Lib Dem MPs are now women.

Mr Johnson yesterday spoke directly to traditiona­l Labour voters who had helped carry him to victory, pledging that his ‘People’s Government’ would ‘not let them down’.

He added: ‘ To all those whose pencils may have wavered over the ballot and who heard the voices of their parents and their grandparen­ts whispering anxiously in their ears, I say thank you for the trust you have placed in us and in me. We will work round the clock to repay your trust and to deliver on your priorities.’

Mr Johnson also appealed to Remainers, saying he would ‘never ignore’ them and pledging to ensure their ‘ good and positive’ feelings towards other European nations are reflected in the post-Brexit relationsh­ip he negotiates with the EU. He added: ‘I frankly urge everyone on either side – after three-and-a-half years of increasing­ly arid argument – I urge everyone to find closure and to let the healing begin.’

Mr Johnson will today travel North to visit the remains of Labour’s ‘Red Wall’ seats, which turned blue as voters flocked to his pledge to deliver on the 2016 referendum result. Yesterday he acknowledg­ed that many voters in seats such as Bolsover, Sedgefield and Leigh may have

only ‘lent’ him their vote and ‘may intend to return to Labour next time round’.

Addressing them directly, he said: ‘If that is the case, I am humbled that you have put your trust in me, and that you have put your trust in us. And I, and we, will never take your support for granted.

‘And I will make it my mission to work night and day, flat out, to prove you right in voting for me.’ He said that Britain would now leave the EU at the end of next month ‘no ifs, no buts’.

Legislatio­n to put his withdrawal deal into law will be put before Parliament next week. Mr Johnson is also expected to carry out a mini-reshuffle, ahead of a wider shake up of government in February. The

Prime Minister said it was also clear that, once Brexit is delivered, the ‘overwhelmi­ng priority of the British people’ was to focus on the problems in the NHS.

Last night he spoke to German chancellor Angela Merkel and Irish premier Leo Varadkar – two key players in the Brexit talks.

Both congratula­ted him on a victory that confounded critics who claimed the party could not win an election with Brexit unresolved. But the unequivoca­l pledge to ‘Get Brexit Done’, coupled with Labour’s dithering on the issue, saw the Conservati­ves sweep through Leave-supporting areas.

Mr Johnson yesterday said new Tory MPs would be arriving in Westminste­r next week from seats that had ‘never returned a Conservati­ve in 100 years’. Shock victories

included the defeat of Labour veteran Dennis Skinner in the former mining constituen­cy of Bolsover, the ousting of Labour rising star Laura Pidcock and the seizing of Tony Blair’s former stronghold, Sedgefield.

Polling by the former Tory treasurer Lord Ashcroft revealed that the Conservati­ves fared better among working-class voters than Labour. The survey of 13,000 found that the Conservati­ves gained 43 per cent support among people in social classes D and E, compared with 37 per cent for Labour.

Among blue-collar C2 workers, the Tories polled 0 per cent, compared with just 30 per cent for Labour. David Cameron congratula­ted his former friend, saying: ‘It marks the end of Corbyn, and Corbynism, and that’s a very good thing.’ Labour was plunged into bitter infighting by the result, which was its worst since 193 .

Mr Corbyn’s tally of just 203 seats was worse than Michael Foot’s 1983 debacle when Labour won 209.

The Labour leader refused to accept personal blame, and said he would stay on for several months. Even Len McCluskey, whose Unite union gave Labour £3million, called for Mr Corbyn to quit, citing his ‘metropolit­an’ world view, his failure to apologise for anti-Semitism and his ‘incontinen­t’ mess of unbelievab­le policies.

Mr Johnson’s plea for unity did not win over all his critics straight away. Hundreds of activists descended on Whitehall last night to protest against his victory.

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