Jeremy
Corbyn has said a second referendum is “some way off” and that Labour
still wants to negotiate a better Brexit deal, resisting pressure from
shadow cabinet ministers to commit to campaigning immediately for a
public vote.
Speaking in Dublin, the Labour leader said the only way
to break the deadlock would be a general election or a second referendum
after negotiating a softer Brexit deal with Brussels.
Corbyn said
there must not be a repeat of the 2016 referendum on Britain’s EU
membership, and argued that Labour could strike a better agreement with
Brussels that would include a customs union, which would then be put to a
public vote.
He said: “We don’t back a rerun of 2016. That happened.
That is gone. What I do say is that if parliament comes to an
agreement, then it’s reasonable, and if parliament wishes it, there
should be a public vote on it but that is some way off.”
Speaking to
reporters before meetings with Irish politicians and trade unions,
Corbyn said Labour would still like a deal negotiated with the EU that
includes a customs union and greater protections for workers’ rights and
environmental standards.
He also could not say definitively that
remaining in the EU would be on the ballot paper in a public vote,
suggesting the choice would be about whatever deal was negotiated.
Corbyn
said: “I would go back to the EU, explain that we had fought an
election campaign in order to make sure there was a good relationship
with Europe in the future, that we weren’t afraid of public opinion on
this, and ask them to seriously consider what we are suggesting, which
is a customs union with a British say and trade relationship with
Europe, and a dynamic relationship on rights which would not be
undermining Europe on workers’ rights, on consumer rights, on
environmental protections.”
Corbyns’s remarks leave open the option
of Labour campaigning in favour of a Brexit deal in any second
referendum, rather than for the option of remaining in the EU, which is
favoured by many shadow cabinet ministers.
Corbyn also said he would
do whatever was necessary to stop a no-deal Brexit, which could include
working with Conservative moderates to bring the government down.
“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,” he said. “Let the people decide the country’s
future, either in a general election or through a public vote on any
deal agreed by parliament. For Labour any outcome has to work for our
whole country, not just one side of this deliberately inflamed divide.”
Labour’s
preference is still for a general election but Corbyn’s tone on a
second referendum shifted earlier this week to say he would back a poll
on any deal. The move came after Labour fell to third place in the
European elections on just 14% of the vote, losing ground to both the
Liberal Democrats and the Greens.
In contrast, Tom Watson, Labour’s
deputy leader, is campaigning for Labour to get fully behind a second
referendum. He released the results of a survey suggesting that the vast
majority of Labour members who replied wanted an all-member ballot to
decide on whether to change the party’s Brexit policy.
As the contest to replace her as prime minister gathered pace yesterday, Theresa May opted for a different battle u2013 watching England take on South Africa in the opening match of the 2019 Cricket World Cup.