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One Million People in London March Against Brexit, Calling for a Second Referendum, Tories Plan to Oust May

March 25, 2019

 

Anti-Brexit march in London, March 23, 2019 British people with their faces painted in EU flag colors participate in the People’s Vote anti-Brexit march in London on March 23, 2019
   
   

One million join march against Brexit as Tories plan to oust May

Organisers hail UK’s ‘biggest-ever demo’, while Tom Watson leads calls for fresh referendum

The Guardian, Toby Helm and Michael Savage

Sat 23 Mar 2019

In one of the biggest demonstrations in British history, a crowd estimated at over one million people yesterday marched peacefully through central London to demand that MPs grant them a fresh referendum on Brexit.

The Put it to the People march, which included protesters from all corners of the United Kingdom and many EU nationals living here, took place amid extraordinary political turmoil and growing calls on prime minister Theresa May to resign. Some cabinet ministers are considering her de facto deputy David Lidington as an interim replacement for her, although as pro-Remain he would be strongly opposed by Brexiters.

Organisers of the march said precise numbers had been difficult to gauge, but they believed the protest could have been even bigger than that against the Iraq war in February 2003.

The decision by so many to take part, waving EU flags and banners and carrying effigies of Theresa May, came just three days after the prime minister said in a televised statement to the nation that she believed the British people did not support another referendum, and blamed MPs for trying to block their will.

Senior politicians from all the main parties joined the march, including Labour’s deputy leader, Tom Watson, former Tory deputy prime minister Lord Heseltine, the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, and the SNP leader and first minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon.

Addressing the crowd in Parliament Square – as chants of “Where’s Jeremy Corbyn?” rang out – Watson said May could not ignore the march and had to give the people a second vote. “The prime minister claims she speaks for Britain. Well, have a look out of the window, prime minister,” he said.

“Open your curtains. Switch on your TV. Look at this great crowd today. Here are the people. Theresa May: you don’t speak for us.”

Labour’s attempts to find common ground on Brexit had been rebuffed, he said. “At every turn, we have been ignored. At every stage, Theresa May has doubled down rather than reaching out. The way to break the stalemate is for parliament and the people to come together. The way to reunite our country is to decide on our future together. It’s time to say with one voice: put it to the people. Prime minister, you have lost control. Let the people take back control.”

As Conservative MPs and ministers from both sides of the Brexit argument said May could not last in office for many more days – and Downing Street appeared to threaten them with a general election if her deal does not pass this week – Heseltine laid blame for the current crisis at her door. “Generals who lose wars blame the troops. Managers who break their companies blame the workers. Now we can add prime ministers who lose elections blame their MPs,” he said.

Heseltine closed the rally with an appeal to young people to defend democracy and Britain’s place in the world. “Walk tall. Keep the faith. Go back to your villages, your towns and your cities,” he said. “Tell them you were here. Outside the buildings that inspire democracy. Fighting for our tomorrow.”

Sturgeon said the EU’s decision last Thursday to delay Brexit day from 29 March until 12 April at the earliest had created more time to prevent disaster. “This is now the moment of maximum opportunity – we need to avoid the catastrophe of no-deal and the damage which would be caused by the prime minister’s bad deal.”

Organisers said that mobile phone networks jammed and many people barely moved all afternoon as the crowd exceeded expectations. On Saturday a petition calling for article 50 to be revoked passed 4.5 million signatories, making it the most popular the government petitions website has ever hosted. Once any petition of this sort passes 100,000, parliament has to consider debating it.

The march happened ahead of another critical week for Brexit and the prime minister. On Saturday night, as a growing number of Tory MPs said they would back a no-deal Brexit rather than May’s deal or some other arrangement – and many predicted the prime minister could be gone by the end of the week – Downing Street hit back, saying that if they pushed for a no-deal departure, the result could be a general election. “No-deal is not going to happen. Parliament will not allow it,” said a senior No 10 source. “There are so many people opposed to this in parliament that there would be a confidence motion in the government before no-deal. That could mean a general election.”

On Monday a powerful group of backbench MPs will attempt to hand control of the Brexit process to parliament by securing indicative votes on alternative options for Brexit, including a soft, Norway-style option.

Downing Street had been expected to try for a third time to force May’s deal through parliament on Tuesday. However, with Tory support for her disappearing, her team will delay the vote if they conclude that she will be defeated again – an outcome that could see her forced to quit. Whips have warned her that defeat is all but certain.

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/mar/23/one-million-march-against-brexit-tories-plan-oust-may

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Over 1 million rally in London to demand second Brexit referendum

Euro News, By Michael-Ross Fiorentino  • 24/03/2019 -

Over one million protestors marched in London on Saturday to demand a second Brexit referendum, according to organisers of the event.

The massive rally of people from the United Kingdom flooded London's main streets and marched towards the parliament building on Saturday, March 23.

It comes in a tumultuous week for Brexit that saw UK Prime Minister Theresa May ask Brussels to extend the UK's deadline for leaving the EU.

Huge crowds opposed to Britain's current trajectory marched from Marble Arch to outside the UK parliament in Westminster.

Marchers in the British capital carried European Union flags and placards praising the longstanding relationship between Britain and continental Europe.

The protest drew people from all across Britain who are determined to force Prime Minister Theresa May's government to alter its march toward Brexit.

This outcry coincides with a record-breaking petition – which is approaching five million signatures in under four days – to call on the UK to revoke Article 50 and remain in the EU.

According to the relevant laws and regulations of the United Kingdom, once a petition exceeds 10,000 signatures the government must respond publicly and if the number of signatories surpasses 100,000 then parliament must conduct an open debate on the matter.

Joining the protest was First Minister Nicola Sturgeon who says Scotland — which voted overwhelmingly to stay in the EU — has been ignored by the UK government.

London's mayor, Sadiq Khan, also participated in the march and has made it clear he supports revoking Article 50 to end this "Brexit disaster".

Last Saturday, Brexiteers begun the "March to Leave" from Sunderland to London to stop what they see as "Brexit betrayal". Encouraged by former UKIP leader Nigel Farage, around 200 Brexit supporters began a 270-mile march from Tyne and Wear to the British capital.

A week in, the walk is nearing the Midlands city of Nottingham and leavers are expected to arrive in Westminster on Friday, March 29, the original date the UK was meant to leave the EU.

The European Union on Thursday extended the original March 29 Brexit deadline after a series of meetings in Brussels with PM May.

The EU has offered the UK a choice of two possible extensions to Article 50, which sets out the process for leaving the EU:

April 12: the date the UK is set to leave if MPs do not approve the exit deal. The date has been chosen because April 11 is the UK's own legal deadline for taking steps to take part in EU elections. By then, the UK will have had to say what it intends to do: perhaps request a further delay which would mean holding EU elections, or leave the EU without a deal.

May 22: the date the UK will leave the EU if parliament approves the deal. This is to allow time for ratification and is the day before voting begins in the European Parliament elections.

https://www.euronews.com/2019/03/23/watch-live-protesters-march-in-london-to-demand-second-brexit-referendum

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