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London mayor calls for second referendum on Brexit

By Reuters - Sep 16,2018 - Last updated at Sep 16,2018

Anti-Brexit, pro-European Union supporters, carry placards and EU and Union Jack flags as they wait outside Dover Town Hall in Dover, southeast England, on Friday, where businesswoman, campaigner and author Gina Miller launched a nationwide campaign calling to ‘End The Chaos’ of Brexit (AFP Photo)

LONDON — London Mayor Sadiq Khan has called for another referendum on Britain's European Union membership, saying the prime minister's handling of Brexit negotiations had become "mired in confusion and deadlock" and was leading the country down a damaging path.

Britain is due to leave the European Union on March 29. But with Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit plans still not accepted, some lawmakers, as well as union and business leaders are increasingly arguing for people to have a final say on any deal struck with Brussels.

May has repeatedly ruled out holding a second referendum following the vote two years ago to leave the EU. She says members of parliament will get to vote on whether to accept any final deal.

But with time running out for London and Brussels to thrash out a Brexit deal, the British government is preparing plans for a no-deal Brexit.

Finance Minister Philip Hammond told senior ministers last week that Brexit could have to be delayed beyond March 29 in order to pass new laws, The Sun newspaper said on Saturday.

The idea was immediately rejected by May, the report said.

Khan, a senior member of Britain's opposition Labour Party, said Britain was now facing either a bad deal or a no-deal Brexit, both of which were "incredibly risky" for Britain.

Writing in Sunday's Observer newspaper, Khan blamed the government's handling of the negotiations and said the threat to living standards, the economy and jobs was too great for voters not to have a say.

"The government's abject failure — and the huge risk we face of a bad deal or a no-deal Brexit — means that giving people a fresh say is now the right — and only — approach left for our country," he said.

Khan's support for a second referendum, which supporters call a "people's vote", will put more pressure on Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn to change his opposition to the idea.

Labour is due to start its four-day annual party conference in a week's time.

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