Cameron tells United Kingdom voters: ‘Brits don’t quit’
Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn was joined yesterday by London Mayor Sadiq Khan, the First Minister of Wales Carwyn Jones and its Scottish leader Kezia Dugdale in a joint plea for a pro-EU vote.
The Remain campaign claims the level of support from United Kingdom businesses “puts to bed” the claim of Leave campaigners that “business is split” on the Europe issue. They say their companies – which together employ more than 1.75 million people – are stronger in Europe.
“Britain remaining in the European Union would mean the opposite: more certainty, more trade and more jobs”.
“I apologize for the timing and I apologize for the fact that it was able to be used by those who wish us harm”, Farage said.
Politicians are making their final pitch for votes on the last day of campaigning before the European Union referendum.
The referendum’s outcome is hard to predict, because there is little precedent – Britain hasn’t had a referendum on Europe since 1975.
Campaigning with Cameron, former Prime Minister John Major tried played down increasing fears over Turkey’s future European Union membership. “Unless we increase our efforts against climate change significantly, future levels of climate refugees will dwarf what we see in Europe today”.
“And the best way we can do that is by being in it, not by ignoring it”, Chet Patel, a 44-year-old telecoms worker told AFP in central London.
Moreover, earlier this month, investment bank JP Morgan said that the consequences of a Brexit can extend up to reducing around 4,000 jobs within the British economy.
“The country is in an absolute mess”. From retired soccer player David Beckham (“remain”) to British-born American TV host John Oliver (“remain”) and actress Elizabeth Hurley (“leave”), celebrities, CEOs and political leaders have been taking stands on which way they want to the vote to go.
“I think on Friday that businesses, wealth creators, job creators will think: Britain has made a decision, let’s pile back into the economy and create jobs and opportunity because it’s a great place to do business”, he said.
Writing in the Guardian newspaper, he said sterling would dramatically decline if the Leave camp won Thursday’s vote.
I would probably vote to leave.
The issue emerged in the run-up to last year’s general election, when Cameron promised a referendum on European Union membership if he won reelection.
The BBC Wales EU Referendum Debate considered the economy, immigration and Wales’ future, in or out of the EU.
The motive for the killing is unclear but the rare slaying of a politician cast a shadow over a divisive campaign that has been unusually heated, even by the lively standards of British politics. Friends and family planned to hold a celebration of Cox’s life in cities around the world Wednesday, which would have been her 42nd birthday.
A man accused of her murder gave his name as “death to traitors, freedom for Britain” when he appeared in court on Saturday.
“She had very strong political views and I believe she was killed because of those views”, her husband Brendan Cox told broadcasters.
“She anxious about the tone of the debate” that focused increasingly on immigration and “about the tone of whipping up fears and whipping up hatred”.