Southport Visiter

With Damien Moore MP We still have issues to discuss – but Brexit must happen

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BACK in 2016, the British people were asked by MPs to take a decision: should the UK remain a member of the European Union, or leave.

In that campaign, those who campaigned for leave and remain disagreed profusely. but, on one thing, they were undivided: what the British people decided would be respected, and MPs would implement it.

In the run-up to the vote, the Prime Minister, David Cameron, sent a booklet to every household outlining the case for remain. He stated: “This is your decision. The Government will implement what you decide.”

The people knew what they were voting for.

If a majority of the public had voted to remain, the result would have been respected and the UK continued to remain a member of the EU. No doubt disagreeme­nts about the process and the result would have ensued, but the overwhelmi­ng majority of people would have accepted the outcome. There would have been no calls for a second referendum. On the rare occasions when Parliament has put a question in a referendum, it has always been the case that the response carries a profound significan­ce and binding agreement between Parliament and the British people.

Indeed, when the people of Scotland voted by a margin of 10.6%, on a turnout of 84%, to leave the UK, that result was accepted by Parliament.

And when the people of Wales voted by a margin of 0.3%, on a turnout of just over 50%, to endorse the creation of the Welsh Assembly, that result was accepted by Parliament.

We have never had a referendum in the UK that has not been respected, and Parliament understood this fact when it voted overwhelmi­ngly to trigger Article 50.

Both major parties understood this fact when they stood on election manifestos in 2017 that pledged to honour the result of the referendum.

As we have seen over the last few weeks, there are some in Westminste­r who would wish to delay or stop Brexit and who will use every device available to them to do so. I am not one of those MPs.

I fully respect the result of the 2016 referendum and believe the UK should leave the EU on March 29. As someone who voted to leave, I understand the importance in delivering a result the people voted for and I look forward to the opportunit­ies that await an outward-looking UK.

Yet, one thing remained painstakin­gly clear in the Prime Minister’s withdrawal agreement that I could not support – that is the Northern Ireland “backstop”.

While the backstop is a position of last resort, to maintain an open border on the island of Ireland, in the event that the UK leaves the EU without securing an all-encompassi­ng deal, the proposal that the two parts of Ireland could be in different customs and regulatory regimes from the UK is contrary to the Government’s own red lines of leaving the customs union and the single market. It is one foot in, one foot out.

What’s more, a backstop would enable campaigner­s in Scotland the mandate for a second independen­ce referendum.

At a time when we are facing the most substantia­l constituti­onal juncture in this country’s recent political history, the reopening of old wounds will not help, but hinder our progressio­n. I find this completely unacceptab­le.

I met the Prime Minister before the vote to encourage her to remove this item from the withdrawal agreement.

After all, the backstop is an item the Government suggested in the negotiatio­ns, not the EU, and it is clear that it remains the largest hurdle preventing a much closer consensus in Parliament. Indeed, if the Government secures meaningful change on this issue, to the extent that our confidence and supply partners are content, I will support the Prime Minister and I am confident that the majority of my colleagues would, too.

Whether the backstop alone is enough to reach a majority in the Commons is left to be seen; but one thing is for certain - MPs would be much closer to reaching a consensus than we are today.

I have sought to maintain an open dialogue with constituen­ts, irrespecti­ve of how they voted.

For me, it is important that we respect the result of the referendum, but this does not mean we shut the door on the 48.1% who voted to remain. To do so would be reckless.

While there are significan­t opportunit­ies beyond the EU, we should remain considerat­e of the fact that, in Southport, somewhere, there are likely to be examples of uncertaint­y.

An EU National who has worked at our local A&E department, facing an uncertain future, or a small business unsure about just-in-time delivery of their products, for example.

Although these are not reasons to block Brexit, they do serve as a reminder that, while MPs are making tough decisions on Brexit and our future relationsh­ip with the EU, there are people in Southport and across the country who are unquestion­ably conscious about their immediate future.

Similarly, decent hardworkin­g people voted for Brexit and I will not join those MPs who are fabricatin­g ever-changing facile Brexit concoction­s that will inevitably create more instabilit­y and uncertaint­y for those people.

This extends to those calling for a second referendum on the deplorable basis that 800,000 senior voters have died since 2016.

Here in Southport, while it is clear that the Liberal Democrats want to frustrate voters and renege on the referendum result entirely, at least their opposition to Brexit is very clear.

The Labour Party, on the other hand, have so far failed to outline what their position is on Brexit. We hear their endless expostulat­ion, but what do they support?

What’s more, Southport Labour has not informed voters how their presumed candidate voted in the referendum two years ago and have so far refused to outline whether they are committed to seeing Brexit implemente­d on March 29.

In a constituen­cy where the votes were counted across council boundaries, not individual constituen­cies, and we have no way of knowing whether Southport voted to leave or remain, clarity on the position of politician­s on these important matters is not only required – it is essential.

While some may disagree with my position, unlike my Liberal and Labour counterpar­ts, I have respected the referendum result; I have maintained an open dialogue with residents in Southport to ensure businesses and residents are represente­d, irrespecti­ve of how they voted; and I have made my position clear.

If you are a resident in Southport, I would like to hear your views on Brexit. Please email me at damien.moore.mp@parliament.uk

 ??  ?? Damien Moore
Damien Moore
 ??  ?? In or out . . . the nation has decided on our future
In or out . . . the nation has decided on our future

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