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Vol 45 | Issue 9
Legal advice you can trust
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2nd July to 8th July 2016
Let noble thoughts come to us from every side
But We Shall Overcome...
Marcus Parekh
In a result almost no political pundit believed was possible, Britain has voted to leave the European Union. In the days that have followed, Britain has seen the resignation of its Prime Minister, the attempted coup against Jeremy Corbyn, a collapse in the value of the pound, the loss of the esteemed AAA credit rating, the push for independence by Scotland (and perhaps even London), the collapse of the property market and a sharp increase in racist abuse and hate crimes. The breakdown of votes exposes how divided a nation Britain has become. London, Scotland and Northern Ireland all voted overwhelmingly in favour of Remain, yet the rest of England and Wales voted in favour of Leave. Generationally the country is split also. Over threequarters of those aged 1824 voted to Remain while more than two-thirds of over 65s voted to Leave.
Middle England’s voting has created a powerful desire in Scotland to hold another independence referendum. First Minister for Scotland Nicola Sturgeon stated that Scotland would not be “dragged out of the EU against our will”, calling a second referendum “extremely likely”. In London, 175,539 people have signed an online petition demanding the capital declare itself an independent city state and rejoin the EU. Mayor Sadiq Khan dismissed these ideas but did say that London must “take back control of its own destiny “right now”. Mr. Khan also demanded that London have a say in the terms of Britain’s exit, stating London “simply has to have a seat at those negotiations”. Anguished Remain voters are also desperately trying to apply for citizenship in Ireland. The Irish Republic’s foreign minister says the country has Continued on page 6
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Corbyn loses no-confidence vote
Jeremy Corbyn has lost a noconfidence vote among Labour MPs, according to a report in the Independent. The party’s parliamentarians voted 172 to 40 against Corbyn’s leadership in a secret ballot on Tuesday afternoon. While there were four abstentions in the ballot, 13 MPs did not vote. Corbyn responded to the vote by saying he would
not resign, suggesting to do so would be a “betrayal” of the members who elected him by a landslide last year. The leader's allies have told his critics to trigger a formal leadership contest if they want to challenge him. The vote, which is not binding, follows resignations from the shadow cabinet and calls on Corbyn to quit.