British Muslim politician quits Brexit camp, citing ‘lies and xenophobia’

Sayeeda Warsi accuses ‘Leave’ campaigners of wrongly suggesting that staying in EU will bring hoards of refugees to UK


Reuters June 20, 2016
Britain's Baroness Sayeeda Warsi speaks at the Conservative Party Conference, in Birmingham in central England October 3, 2010. PHOTO: REUTERS

LONDON: A senior British politician on Monday accused those campaigning for Britain to leave the European Union of spreading lies, hate and xenophobia, saying she was switching to the "Remain" camp.

Britons will cast their votes on Thursday in a referendum on whether to quit the 28-member bloc, a choice with far-reaching economic and political consequences for Britain and the rest of the continent.

Sayeeda Warsi, a former minister and co-chair of the ruling Conservative Party, accused "Leave" campaigners of wrongly suggesting that staying in the EU would lead to vast numbers of Turks and Syrian refugees coming to Britain in the near future.

"Are we prepared to tell lies, to spread hate and xenophobia just to win a campaign? For me that's a step too far," she told The Times newspaper.

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"I don't want the Leave camp to be running this country and I don't want the messages coming out of that camp to form the basis of the kind of Britain that I want to live in and to bring my kids up in," she said.

The official Vote Leave organisation was dismissive, with a spokesman saying they did not remember Warsi joining their campaign and were puzzled by her announcement.

Warsi had not played a prominent role in the "Leave" campaign but said she had long made the case for quitting the EU.

The "Leave" camp's key argument has been that Britain would be unable to control immigration levels as long as it was in the EU, while the "Remain" campaign has focused on the economic risks a Brexit, or British exit, would pose.

The tone of the arguments had become increasingly vitriolic until the murder on Thursday last week of opposition Labour lawmaker Jo Cox, a passionate Remain campaigner, changed the atmosphere.

The House of Commons, which was not supposed to be sitting this week, was being recalled on Monday for lawmakers from across the political spectrum to pay tribute to Cox, the first of their number to be murdered since 1990.

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Campaigning for the EU referendum resumed on Sunday after a three-day pause following Cox's murder.

Three opinion polls showed "Remain" recovering some momentum in the wake of her death, but the overall picture remained one of an evenly split electorate.

The British pound gained nearly 2 per cent against the dollar on Monday, boosted by the shift in the polls, rising as high as $1.4625, its highest level since June 7.

The probability of a "Remain" vote implied by Betfair betting odds rose to 72 per cent on Monday, up from a range between 60 and 67 per cent on Friday.

COMMENTS (9)

Kolsat | 7 years ago | Reply @leela4fun: Most refugees coming to Australia are economic refugees i.e. those who are not real refuges but those who pay large sums of money to people smugglers to travel to Australia on leaky boats for easy comfortable life. The refugees coming to Europe are very uneducated rifraff who will take years to fit into an egalitarian European society. They will create problems for Europe by not integrating in the society there build mosques, produce many children from their many wives, demand sharia and complain about unfairness of the society and government while exploiting the welfare system and not contributing much to their adopted nation's economy as the refugess have been doing in Australia for years. They exploit the welfare system and run down the economy.
Aly | 7 years ago | Reply Fake refugees? Is that going to stop? Use your common sense, out is not going to change anything. The biggest liars of Leave campaign selling dreams to ignorant public to ship UK back to dark ages.
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