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Blair: Brexit’s Approach A Total Mess

Blair: Brexit’s Approach A Total Mess
folder_openUnited Kingdom access_time5 years ago
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Local Editor

Former British prime minister Tony Blair described his country’s approach to Brexit “a total and complete mess.”

Blair, who held the office for 10 years, said he sympathizes with Prime Minister Theresa May as she seeks to unite her party behind a plan for leaving the European Union, suggesting she has "the least enviable job in Western politics".

But the former Labour leader warned that with the scheduled date for Brexit approaching in March next year, it is time for her to admit "there's no way out" and call another referendum -- with the option of staying in the EU.

"Once this thing has been started by a referendum it can frankly only be finished by a fresh vote," he said.

Blair left office in 2007 and spent many of the following years abroad, including as an international envoy to the Middle East.

"I'm passionately opposed to Brexit and I still believe it can be changed," the 65-year-old told AFP in the offices of his non-profit organization, the Institute for Global Change.

Blair himself said it was a "mush", an "incomplete half-in half-out" plan that pleased no one -- and was unlikely to be accepted by Brussels.

He noted the inherent dilemma in Brexit -- stay close to the EU to protect trade but forfeit the opportunities of going it alone, or cut ties altogether and risk damage to the economy.

With parliament "paralyzed" on the way forward, "the only way in the end this is going to be resolved is putting it back to the people", he said.

Blair's interventions on Brexit have not always been well received in Britain, where his decision to join the United States in invading Iraq in 2003 remains hugely unacceptable.

But while the prime minister who called the Brexit vote in 2016, David Cameron, has retired from the public eye to write his memoirs, Blair refuses to stay silent.

The European Union itself is currently split over how to handle irregular migration and asylum seekers, divisions Blair described as "very dangerous".

"There is a crisis. The popularism of left and right is, you know, (at) risk of breaking the back of Western politics," Blair said.

He admitted that "the center ground of politics is pretty absent at the moment" -- but denied suggestions he could help form a new centrist party in Britain.

His own Labour party has moved to the political left since he was in charge, and while many of its MPs are pro-European, its socialist leader Jeremy Corbyn is more skeptical.

Blair said that for all his hopes of stopping Brexit, it depended on "whether at the top of the Labour party the leader, the people around the leader, still want Brexit to go through".

But he said he hoped it would "come back to sense", adding that in the meantime, he would press his case.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

 

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