Leadership hopeful May vows to unify Britain behind EU exit
This reluctance to guarantee the position of European Union nationals is going down very badly in the press, and doesn’t seem to reflect the wishes of the electorate either – British Future polling finds 77 per cent even of Leave voters favour letting people who are already here continue to live here.
Citing EU treaty Article 4 demanding “sincere cooperation” from member states, the official said: “If your action paralyses the system then we can legally oblige you”.
Former Labour leader Ed Miliband said “the forced deportation of millions of European Union citizens is something no sane or fair government would contemplate doing”. “We need to get on with it, we need to get a grip and make progress”. (Half the Labour Party’s traditional supporters didn’t even know that their own party supported staying in the EU.) Both major British political parties, for the moment, are essentially leaderless.
“That’s something I had seen in Ivory Coast”, Thiam, a former government minister in the West African country, told a business conference in the south of France.
There is anger for the leader of the Independence Party, Nigel Farage, who many blame for a surge of racism and hate crimes after the vote.
“But they also need to respect the democracy of our party and the views of Labour’s membership, which has increased by more than 60,000 in the past week alone”. “This is not us, not Plymouth”.
Five candidates are vying to succeed Cameron as Conservative Party leader and prime minister.
Tory MPs who campaigned on both sides of the referendum today lined up in the Commons to criticise May.
Britain’s Home Secretary Theresa May attends a press conference in London, Britain, June 30, 2016. “There is no way they will be bargaining chips in our negotiations”.
Financial movers and shakers gathered in France yesterday urged a clear and timely political response to lift the uncertainty caused by Britain’s shock vote to leave the European Union.
But the process faces a legal challenge from law firm Mishcon de Reya, which on Sunday said it would argue the government needs the backing of parliament to act.
“For the current or future prime minister to invoke Article 50 without the approval of parliament is unlawful”.
Mail Online reports the former Republican vice-presidential candidate says the United Kingdom is America’s “indispensable ally” and needed to be helped after it chose to leave the European Union.
“Members of the Institute of Directors are very concerned about what the UK’s vote to leave means for their existing workforce”. Low returns on savings and pension investments are a problem across Europe, where central banks have slashed rates to help the economy.
Writing in The Daily Telegraph UK in his first column since pulling out of the Tory leadership race, the blond Brexiteer said that “among a section of the population” there has been “a kind of hysteria, a contagious mourning” since the vote to leave.
Britons voted by 52 to 48 percent to leave the bloc it had joined in 1973, defeating a campaign led by Prime Minister David Cameron, who announced his resignation the following morning.
“But if you step out of the front of the queue, by definition you are no longer at the front and some notion that you can jump further ahead; you just want to say that is not the trend for the types of big deals we are doing these days”.