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Jeremy Corbyn signals shift on second referendum after party pressure

Labour leader says voters should "decide the country's future, either in a general election or through a public vote on any deal".

Jeremy Corbyn has faced growing pressure to give firmer backing for a second referendum
Image: Jeremy Corbyn has faced growing pressure to give firmer backing for a second referendum
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Jeremy Corbyn has said that a general election or a second referendum is now the "only way out" of the Brexit crisis.

The Labour leader has been facing growing pressure from party members and senior MPs to explicitly back another public vote after suffering a drubbing in the EU elections.

Mr Corbyn said: "Faced with the threat of no deal and a prime minister with no mandate, the only way out of the Brexit crisis ripping our country apart is now to go back to the people.

"Let the people decide the country's future, either in a general election or through a public vote on any deal agreed by parliament."

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Corbyn: A Farage Brexit would cause 'chaos'

Mr Corbyn added that he would do "whatever is necessary" to prevent the UK crashing out of the European Union without a deal - signalling he would be willing to collaborate with Tory moderates and potentially table a confidence motion to bring down the government.

"Labour will work with anyone across party boundaries and do whatever is necessary to stop a disastrous no-deal outcome, which would open the way for a frenzy of deregulation and a race to the bottom in jobs, rights and protections," he said.

Last week's EU elections saw Labour lose half of its MPs and come in third place behind the Brexit Party and the pro-Remain Liberal Democrats.

More on Brexit

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European elections: Winners and losers

Alastair Campbell, a former head of communications for Tony Blair in Downing Street, was recently expelled from the party after he admitted voting Lib Dem.

Deputy Labour leader Tom Watson has since called for Labour members who backed rival parties in the European elections to be granted an amnesty from expulsion.

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Mr Corbyn is due to hold meetings with Irish President Michael D Higgins and Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar on Thursday, and is expected to discuss Labour's plan for a UK-EU customs union.

Ahead of those talks, Mr Corbyn claimed the Conservative Party's leadership contest over the coming weeks "will most likely end with a small number of wildly unrepresentative right-wing Conservative activists foisting a no-deal zealot on the country".

The leader of the opposition said any outcome on Brexit "has to work for our whole country, not just one side of this deliberately inflamed divide".

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Kicking me out 'a strange thing to do'

Mr Corbyn's comments appear to mark a shift in his position on a second EU referendum.

Prior to last week's polls, Labour's manifesto stated the party would back the "option" of a public vote, if it failed to get a Brexit deal in line with its own "alternative plan" or a general election.

After the results emerged, shadow chancellor John McDonnell claimed the party could not "hide" from its disappointing performance.

He admitted securing a general election would be difficult, in which case he would support "going back to the people in another referendum".

Also reflecting on what Labour should have done different before the election, shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry said: "[The party] should have said quite simply that any deal that comes out of this government should be put to a confirmatory referendum; that Remain should be on the ballot paper; and that Labour would campaign to Remain."

Fellow Corbyn loyalist, shadow home secretary Diane Abbott, also recently claimed Labour was "supporting a people's vote strongly now because it's the right thing to do".

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Labour deputy demands expulsion 'amnesty'

Labour deputy leader Tom Watson attacked the party's Brexit position before the EU elections as "a deliberate and ultimately self-defeating attempt to triangulate between different groups".

On Wednesday, Mr Watson revealed his survey of nearly 9,000 Labour Party members and supporters revealed 84% want an all-member ballot to decide the party's Brexit policy.

He said: "As deputy leader I'll support them to make this happen."

Previous polls have shown overwhelming support for a second EU referendum among Labour's membership.

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'Our only option now is a referendum'

Responding to Mr Corbyn's comments, Labour MP Bridget Phillipson, who is a supporter of the People's Vote campaign for a fresh public vote, said: "Jeremy Corbyn's words show he is at last beginning to listen to what our voters and members are saying.

"But, as John McDonnell has admitted and as the Tory leadership contest increasingly makes clear, there is no immediate prospect of a general election.

"That is why it is now vital Labour follows through on its clearly stated conference policy by campaigning for the only available fair and democratic solution to the Brexit crisis - a People's Vote that gives the public the final say."

But, demonstrating the split within Labour over the issue of a second EU referendum, the party's chairman Ian Lavery suggested supporters of a fresh public vote are "left-wing intellectuals" who are "sneering at ordinary people and piling on those trying to convey the feelings of hundreds of thousands of Labour voters".