Brexit HELL: Starmer and Sturgeon would ‘tear it to pieces’ in new plot if Boris ousted

Keir Starmer calls for another Brexit referendum

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Britain finally left the European Union just over a year ago, freeing the nation from EU rules and ending nearly 50 years of membership to the continental bloc. This was led by Boris Johnson, who followed through with a general election manifesto pledge from 2019 to “get Brexit done”. But the Prime Minister is coming under pressure as reports looking into the “partygate” scandal come flooding in, with his own Conservative Party MPs increasingly turning against him.

Now a foreign policy analyst has warned that if he is forced out of 10 Downing Street, “the entire Brexit project would be under severe threat”.

He believes if the Tories are unsuccessful at an early general election, Labour and the SNP could form a tight coalition that would “defy the will of the British people and tear Brexit to pieces”.

Nile Gardiner, who is also a former aide to Margaret Thatcher, told Express.co.uk: “Boris Johnson delivered Brexit and changed British history and the country’s future for the better.

“But if he was to go, the entire Brexit project would be under severe threat.

“The Left hate Boris because of what he achieved with Brexit over anything else.

“They see toppling Boris as an opportunity to bring down the entire Brexit process.

Mr Gardiner warned: “There could be an early general election, and the polls show Labour with a significant lead.

“This is a very cynical exercise to try and remove Boris from power and force an early general election and undo the entire Brexit project.

“If Labour and the SNP formed a tight coalition, they would both defy the will of the British people and tear Brexit to pieces.”

Following the Brexit referendum in June 2016, both Labour and the SNP have frequently voiced their strong opposition towards Brexit.

Sir Keir campaigned for a second referendum on the UK’s membership of the EU under the Labour Party leadership of Jeremy Corbyn.

In June 2019 – just a few months before the most recent general election – the then-Shadow Brexit Secretary admitted he was pushing for Labour to support Remain in any second EU referendum.

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He said: “In the aftermath of the local elections and particularly the EU elections, there are many in the Labour party who feel we need to be very clear about a second referendum and about making the case for Remain.

“That’s certainly what I’m advocating, discussions are going on at the moment, I hope we can resolve it pretty soon, and that will be a material step in the right direction as far as I’m concerned.”

SNP leader Ms Sturgeon has also regularly vented her fury at Brexit, using it as a reason why a second referendum on Scottish independence must be held.

Despite the UK marginally voting in favour of Brexit, it was quite the opposite in Scotland, with 62 percent wanting Britain to remain in the EU.

When Mr Johnson struck a post-Brexit trade deal with the EU in December 2020, Ms Sturgeon raged: “People in Scotland voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU, but their views have been ignored.

“This is a far harder Brexit than could have been imagined when the EU referendum took place, damaging and disrupting this nation’s economy and society at the worst possible time.

“We are doing everything we can to mitigate against the consequences of the UK Government’s actions – but we cannot avert every negative outcome.

“We know that businesses are already struggling under the burden of COVID-19, and are now faced with the need to prepare for this hard Brexit in little more than a week’s time.

She added: “We will do all we can to help them and are issuing updated information and advice and urge those most affected, including businesses, to prepare.

“Scotland did not vote for any of this and our position is clearer than ever. Scotland now has the right to choose its own future as an independent country and once more regain the benefits of EU membership.”

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