• Breaking News

    Sunday, June 19, 2016

    Shocking As Video Footage Emerges of Boris Supporting EU Single Market

    Boris Johnson Has Earlier Kicked Against Supporting Single Market But This Time Around, A Video of Him Saying "I DO VOTE TO STAY IN THE SINGLE MARKET" Has Emerged

    Boris Johnson

    Boris Johnson has been a Leave Campaigner of the EU Single Market but a Video emerged that proved the other way round where he said "I DO VOTE TO STAY IN THE SINGLE MARKET" 

    The former Mayor of London went on to say "I WANT US TO BE ABLE TO TRADE WITH OUR EUROPEAN FRIENDS AND PARTNERS"

    With the surfacing of the video interview of 2013 that has emerged recently has contradicted his stance about leaving the EU single market.

    With this written in the Sun on Sunday today, the former Mayor said "This is a one-in-a-lifetime to take back control of our democracy from an unelected, undemocratic, unaccountable and unreformed European Union.

    "We are working flat out to achieve this. Is a chance to take back control of huge sum of money and take back control of our trade policy. There's a massive opportunity for Britain. We should be full of excitements and hope about what can be achieved. His words.

    Prime Minister David Cameron has warns its citizens (Voters) against "a-one way ticket" Out of the EU, informing them, "that there would be "no turning back" from a leave vote.

    The prime minister then went on to say, the Leave campaign dismissal of expert warning against Brexit is like ignoring the safe advice of a car mechanic

    "If you were to get into your family car and drive your family at high speed on a motorway and the mechanic said to you, 'The brakes are faulty, the fuel is leaking, don't get in that car' you would listen to that expert. he said.

    "Would you take a risk with your family and get into a faulty car? You wouldn't. He said.

    A three point lead has be opened following the tragic death of MP Jo Cox as campaigning in the EU referendum resumes. 

    Survey carried out on 17 and 18 Junes shows that 45% votes to remain back in the EU while to leave the EU is 42% with just three points ahead of leave on.

    A BMG telephone poll for The Herald, between 10 and 15 June, put Remain ahead on 46% with Leave on 43%, and 11% undecided or unwilling to say.

    However, other opinion polls showed a mixture of results just days before the EU vote.

    YouGov for The Sunday Times put Remain on 44%, one point ahead of Leave on 43% in a poll on 16 and 17 June.

    ComRes for The Sunday People and The Independent has 44% saying they would be "delighted" with an Out vote compared to just 28% who would feel the same way about In. The poll was done between 15 and 16 June.

    Opinium for The Observer, between 14 and 17 June, put the two sides level pegging on 44% - with Leave up two points on last week while Remain was unchanged.

    Sky's Senior Political Correspondent Jason Farrell said: "It seems as if, over the course of just a few days, in the wake of Jo Cox's murder, that there has been a shift in mood by the public."

    Regarding the YouGov poll, he added: "(YouGov) says that (the results) are not down to a reaction to the killing of Jo Cox but due to a growing concern about the economic effects of Brexit."

    The campaigns were suspended following the death of MP Jo Cox on Thursday, a killing that sparked discussion over the increasingly harsh tone of the debate.

    With the referendum set for Thursday, Mr Osborne wrote in The Mail on Sunday: "Let's have less inflammatory rhetoric and baseless assertion, and more facts and reasoned argument."

    He added that he hoped the campaigning could be conducted in a "less divisive tone".

    It was immediately after the former Mayor of London Sadiq Khan told Sky News, it is "poisonous the way politics are conducted in Britain and that it must change.

    When asked about the death of MP Jo Cox, the former London Mayor said the behaviour of her colleagues during the referendum campaigns was "not decent."  

    In paying tribute to MP Jo Cox, the in the house of commons and sit together, the MPs have been backing a plan to break with the usual political division.

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