InFacts

Labour must back public vote on any deal, not just Tory one

Reuters

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Despite pressure mounting for the Labour leadership to back a public vote on any kind of Brexit deal, the party’s executive committee is expected to lean towards a fudge when it finalises its European election manifesto tomorrow. That would be a tactical error. An open letter signed by 5,000 potential supporters is the latest evidence that pro-Europeans would rally behind Jeremy Corbyn if he ended the ambiguity around his party’s Brexit policy.

The letter, written by InFacts, is signed by pro-Europeans who would “strongly consider voting for Labour” in the upcoming European elections if Labour were to take a “clear stance in favour of a confirmatory public vote on any Brexit outcome”. It points to recent polling that suggests this is what the overwhelming majority of Labour voters want, while suggesting pro-Europeans of other political stripes would also support the party on May 23.

The letter was sent to Jeremy Corbyn’s office today, ahead of a potentially heated meeting of Labour MPs this evening and the final decision on the manifesto tomorrow.

Voices from within the Labour party have grown louder in recent days. Peter Kyle and Phil Wilson, the backbench MPs responsible for tabling amendments for a confirmatory referendum in Parliament before Easter, have written their own letter. In it, they warn: “If a ‘deal’ is implemented without first going to the people for confirmation, then in the months and years ahead, the public will have a right to say ‘this isn’t the Brexit I voted for’.”

And that’s the essential point behind calls for a new referendum. It’s almost three years since the 2016 vote, so much has changed. Countless promises made by the Leave campaign have now been broken. New facts have emerged: the threat to peace on the Irish border; a “blindfold” Brexit with many years of uncertainty being offered by the prime minister; a populist “America First” president in the White House. Surely, before the UK agrees to any deal, the people should have a final say on the terms?

Others Labour figures are speaking out too:

Corbyn and his team clearly want a say on the terms of Brexit – and are happy to propose a public vote if it stops a Tory Brexit or no-deal crash out. Talks are ongoing with the government, covering key Labour concerns such as workers’ rights and environmental protections. But these talks too seem to be reaching a stalemate. For a party with such strong democratic traditions, why can’t Corbyn get fully behind the democratic solution of putting the thing back to the people come what may?

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