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Brexit in balance as UK votes in high-stake poll

Friday, December 13th, 2019 00:00 | By
veteran socialist Jeremy Corbyn.

London, Thursday

Britain went to the polls on Thursday to decide the future of Brexit in a snap pre-Christmas election aimed at ending years of political deadlock and bitter divisions over the country’s  European Union membership.

A decisive victory for Prime Minister Boris Johnson would most likely end Britain’s 46-year involvement in the bloc next month, setting a course for a new future based on closer ties with the United States and even China.

But a win for the opposition could still reverse the Brexit process and give Britain its most leftist government in decades led by veteran socialist Jeremy Corbyn, who is committed to re-nationalisation and massive public sector spending.

A windmill, a few pubs and a chip shop have all been hastily turned into polling stations across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland for what is widely seen as Britain’s most important vote in a generation, and its third in less than five years.

Johnson, who has said the result is on a “knife edge”, was the first party leader to vote in person, arriving at a central London polling station with his Jack Russell dog, Dilyn.

Opinion polls, which were almost unanimously wrong about Britain’s last general election in 2017, show Johnson’s ruling Conservative party in the lead, but by a margin too small to form own government.

Corbyn, who has had to brush off claims of indecision about his neutral stance on Brexit stance and claims of anti-Semitism within his Labour party flashed a thumbs up sign before casting his own ballot in north London.

Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson and Nicola Sturgeon of the Scottish National Party both voted soon afterwards in Glasgow. 

All eyes initially were on the winter weather, with near-freezing temperatures, rain and even snow in some parts potentially affecting voter turnout.

Narrow majority

Up for grabs are all 650 seats in the British parliament, which has been deadlocked since the 2016 referendum on EU membership that saw a narrow majority vote to leave.

The first indication of the overall result will come in an exit poll at 2200 GMT. The first actual result is due from around 2300 GMT and the remainder will trickle in overnight.

Johnson, who took over from Theresa May in July after she was unable to get parliament to approve her EU divorce deal, is hoping to secure both a mandate and a majority.

“Just imagine how wonderful it will be to settle down to a turkey dinner this Christmas with Brexit decided,” he said in a final message to voters.

But the EU itself has indicated the chances of securing a comprehensive trade deal before a December 2020 deadline is unrealistic. -AFP

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