Brexit tears up UK politics as Farage tops EU election poll

Bloomberg

Brexit upended Britain’s established political order in European Parliament elections, with both the ruling Conservatives and the main opposition Labour Party scoring their worst results in decades.
Voters backed politicians with clear pro- and anti-European Union agendas, fuelling demands for a second referendum on one side of the divisive national debate, and a hard,
no-deal split from the EU on the other.
With nearly all the vote counts complete, Nigel Farage’s Brexit Party, which wants the UK to leave the EU without an agreement, was in first place, with 32 percent of the vote across the country. In second place, with 20 percent, were the Liberal Democrats, who want to stay in the bloc.
Labour, which is split about what to do, was third on 14 percent, prompting fresh calls from senior party figures to back a second referendum to clarify its own policy and resolve the impasse in parliament.
The anti-Brexit Greens were on 12 percent.
In fifth place were Theresa May’s Conservatives on 9 percent, a catastrophic result for the party of government. The heavy defeat immediately sparked calls for the Tories to speed up efforts to leave the bloc or risk being destroyed at the next general election. May finally gave in to pressure from her Tory critics and announced Friday that she would quit as prime minister. Conservatives supporting a quick, hard break with the EU are likely to use Farage’s success to bolster their case for preparing to leave without a deal.
“Never before in British politics has a new party launched just six weeks ago topped the polls in a national election,” Farage said, after he was re-elected an MEP. “The reason of course is very obvious: We voted to leave in a referendum, we were supposed to do so on March 29 — and we haven’t.”
The pound, which has weakened this month on growing concerns about a no-deal exit, was unchanged at $1.2717.

Existential Risk
Britain was due to leave the EU on March 29 but May’s failure to get the deal she negotiated with the bloc ratified in Parliament has forced the UK to delay exit day until October 31. Euroskeptic voters have run out of patience and punished the ruling Tories for their inability to deliver on the 2016 referendum decision to leave the EU.
Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt — one of those running to replace May — said on Twitter that the result was predictable but “painful” for the Conservatives. He warned of an “existential risk to our party unless we now come together and get Brexit done.”
Boris Johnson, the current favorite to win the leadership, agreed with Hunt’s diagnosis. “The voters are delivering a crushing rebuke to the government — in fact, to both major parties,” he wrote in his column for the Telegraph newspaper. “I cannot find it in my heart to blame them,” Johnson wrote. “We have missed deadline after deadline, broken promise after promise.” There is little sign that the elections will break the deadlock in Parliament. Conservatives who rejected May’s deal because it stayed too close to the EU — such as Johnson — will argue that support for the Brexit Party shows the public agrees with them. Other Tories will look at the loss of votes to the Liberal Democrats and come to the opposite conclusion.
With the race to succeed May under way, many of the candidates are seeking to appeal to Conservative activists, who are pro-Brexit, by announcing their support for a no-deal divorce.

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