Politics

Boris Johnson accuses Jeremy Corbyn of ‘sly’ plan to ‘fiddle’ second Brexit referendum



Boris Johnson has accused Jeremy Corbyn of a “sly” plan to “fiddle” a second Brexit referendum.

The Prime Minister said Mr Corbyn’s stance on the UK’s future with the EU has already done “serious harm” to trust in politics and urged his rival to reconsider his policy on the issue.

Mr Johnson said the Labour leader’s proposal to cancel the result of the 2016 vote would do even more damage, saying the move would create “incredible bitterness” that may take decades to repair.

In a letter to his main General Election opponent, Mr Johnson called on Mr Corbyn to scrap his plan to give full voting rights to all UK residents because it would give two million EU nationals the vote in another referendum.

Jeremy Corbyn, pictured at a campaign rally in Birmingham, has been accused of a ‘sly’ plan to ‘fiddle’ a second Brexit vote (REUTERS)

The Conservative leader wrote: “Your policy is to cancel the result of the last referendum and to hold another one.

“You have made clear that you oppose an Australian-style points system and you will not only continue ‘free movement’ with the EU but your policy is extend it to the entire world.

“Even worse, your manifesto sets out plans to fiddle your second referendum on Brexit. You want to give two million EU nationals the vote in your referendum… This is a sly attempt to undermine the result of the 2016 referendum, and is profoundly undemocratic.”

Mr Corbyn’s party has said it will “give the people the final say” on Brexit, that within three months of coming to power a Labour government would secure a “sensible deal” and within six months they will put that deal to a public vote alongside the option to remain.

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The Prime Minister added: “No true democrat, even the most ardent supporter of Remain, could support your attempt to undermine the result of a democratically expressed vote.

“I urge you in the strongest possible terms to reconsider this policy before the election on Thursday. Cancelling the result of the 2016 referendum is dangerous enough.

“Your approach has already done serious harm to trust in democratic politics and cancelling the result of the previous referendum before it has even been implemented will do more damage.

He continued: “But your policy of giving millions of foreign citizens the vote in order to overturn the referendum would create incredible bitterness that might take decades to repair.

“Imagine how people will feel if the biggest democratic exercise in our history is overturned because you gave two million EU citizens the power to reverse Brexit.

“It would alienate millions who already feel disenfranchised and ignored by our political system.”

Mr Johnson said “very few” voters are aware of this policy, and he fears that if Mr Corbyn becomes Prime Minister it will “create the worst crisis in democratic politics in over a century”.

The PM was earlier asked a question on whether EU citizens should be able to vote in a possible future Brexit referendum. He replied: “I think the whole proposal from the Labour Party is bizarre.

“I think people will be outraged by the whole thing and… to think that it is going to be rigged in some way by getting in millions more voters who’d be very likely to vote one way rather than another, I think that would cause a great deal of public disquiet and I don’t think it’s the right way forward.”

In its manifesto , the Labour Party said they will repeal the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011, adding: “We will oversee the largest extension of the franchise in generations, reducing the voting age to 16, giving full voting rights to all UK residents, making sure everyone who is entitled to vote can do so by introducing a system of automatic voter registration, and abandoning plans to introduce voter ID which has been shown to harm democratic rights.”

Cat Smith, Labour’s shadow minister for voter engagement, said: “The Labour Party believes in democracy. We welcome securing a new and better Brexit deal, and putting it back to the people to have the final say.

“If Boris Johnson had any confidence in his own deal, he would have let it be scrutinised by Parliament, and then put it back before the people for their verdict.”



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