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A million Britons and the rest of Europe anti-Brexit marched Saturday in London to request a second referendum while conservatives were preparing the departure of Prime Minister Theresa May to resolve the traumatic divorce with Europe and find another way.
They were summoned by the "People Vote" movement, which claims that the British must vote to be able to end the divorce with the European Union, when the Article 50 revocation request and stop the Brexit has reached 4 million signatures. Margaret Georgiadou (77), her organizer, receives death threats on Facebook.
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In images reminiscent of anti-war marches in the Gulf, thousands of people demonstrated under the leadership of London Mayor Sadiq Khan, Scottish Prime Minister Nicola Sturgeon, Labor MPs, pro-European Conservatives, the leader Liberal Democrat Vince Cable and personalities like physicist Brian Cox of Park Lane, one of London's most elegant locations, at Parliament Square, in front of the House of Commons.
Tom Watson, the number two Labor Party, is one of his stars after Jeremy Corbyn, the party leader, refused to support a second referendum and does not participate in the march. But these frictions show how much the country is divided around Brexit, in a fracture that runs through the parties.
The flags of the European Union in March in London this Saturday, which attempts to prevent the British exit of the bloc. / REUTERS
"The Prime Minister badures that she is speaking for Britain.Well, look out the window, Prime Minister.Open the curtains.Turn on the television.Take this huge demonstration today.Here are the people. Theresa May: You do not speak for us, "MP Watson told the crowd.
For Watson, "The Brexit is a national disaster of the conservatives", this "Work can not allow that to happen". This is not what the Labor leader thinks.
"Where is Jeremy Corbyn," sang the crowd when she called for a second referendum. The Labor leader was campaigning for the regional elections in Morecambe.
Prime Minister Nicola Sturgeon arrived from Scotland with his solidarity. "My message to European citizens living in Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland is that you are welcome and we want you to stay," he said with applause. Many European residents in the kingdom and their families were on the move.
The most active politicians are those of the new independent group, which left the Labor Party and the Conservatives to form a new party. This is the beginning of a political restructuring in Britain.
"For the future of our children" was one of the slogans. "Revoke Article 50", the other. "I'm 16. You vote for my future," said a hand-written teenager's poster. The Evening Standard, whose editor-in-chief is George Osborne, former Chancellor (Minister) of Finance for David Cameron and hated by Theresa May, is titled "Mars to Stop the Folly" in its cover. Protesters carried it as a banner.
Hundreds of people have arrived from within the Kingdom – Scotland, Wales – North of the UK – to walk with family. They traveled by bus, with 50 people each, funded by them.
The protesters chanted: "Theresa May has to leave." They are not the only ones to think about it. The Conservatives believe the same thing.
May is under intense pressure to set her departure date. Your support in your own practice disappears. The secretaries of state themselves align themselves to replace him and all have lost confidence.
Important conservative sources admit that talks are underway for his departure, after which even his allies believe that there is no other way out than his resignation. In fact, Deputy Prime Minister David Lidington leads negotiations with the opposition to discuss "alternative votes" in Parliament for Brexit. a position that infuriates the Brexitiers, who feel that they are losing all control over the exit from Europe. But Lidington said he was fulfilling a promise he had made to lawmakers and that he was holding it.
In a letter to MPs on Friday night, the Prime Minister said that she was willing not to present her plan for Brexit to a third vote – and a definite defeat – this week if she had not not got the necessary votes sooner. He proposes "seven indicative votes" on the Brexit as an alternative to lawmakers, which he insulted and has now excused.
Exhausted, diabetes in the back, irritated and emotionally destabilized as Margaret Thatcher in her last days, the Prime Minister missed allies after returning from the European Summit. Even the DUP is not with it, Protestant Democratic Unionists of Northern Ireland, who consider that it contributed to "national humiliation" by accepting a change of date by decision of the European Union.
The game may be a resignation or vote of confidence, which may result in an anticipated general election in Britain.
Paris, correspondent
CB MC
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