[《The number who descended on the capital to call for a “people’s vote”
exceeded all expectations of both the organisers and police. Addressing the
crowds, which included dozens of MPs from all political parties, the TV
personality and food writer Delia Smith said Brexit threatened to cause
“unmitigated chaos”.

“The only way we can avoid this total madness and win back our future has
to be a people’s vote,” she declared to loud cheers.

The Liberal Democrat leader Vince Cable said the march showed that British
people were beginning to realise that politicians could not deliver a
successful Brexit that would protect their jobs, livelihoods and their
children’s futures. They were afraid of the havoc that would ensue, and
wanted a chance to stop it.》]

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/oct/20/70000-demand-new-brexit-vote?CMP=share_btn_fb

The Observer Brexit
Almost 700,000 march to demand ‘people’s vote’ on Brexit deal
Huge London demonstration was largest since the protest against the Iraq
war in 2003

Toby Helm, Michael Savage and Eleni Courea

Sat 20 Oct 2018 20.40 BST Last modified on Sun 21 Oct 2018 12.37 BST

Protesters march through London to demand a people’s vote on Brexit on 20
October. Photograph: Ollie Millington/Getty Images

The centre of London ground to a halt as an estimated 700,000 people from
all over the UK marched peacefully on parliament to demand a second
referendum on Brexit. It was the biggest outpouring of public opposition to
government policy since the anti-Iraq war protest in 2003.

The number who descended on the capital to call for a “people’s vote”
exceeded all expectations of both the organisers and police. Addressing the
crowds, which included dozens of MPs from all political parties, the TV
personality and food writer Delia Smith said Brexit threatened to cause
“unmitigated chaos”.

“The only way we can avoid this total madness and win back our future has
to be a people’s vote,” she declared to loud cheers.

The Liberal Democrat leader Vince Cable said the march showed that British
people were beginning to realise that politicians could not deliver a
successful Brexit that would protect their jobs, livelihoods and their
children’s futures. They were afraid of the havoc that would ensue, and
wanted a chance to stop it.


People’s Vote? ‘I want to tell my grandkids that at least I tried’
 Read more
“People have woken up to the potential disaster,” Cable said. “We’ve
realised there isn’t a good deal coming out of this and a lot of people are
frightened, people are worried.”

The march coincided with a call from a senior government minister for Tory
MPs to drop their “ideological obsessions” over Europe, which he said were
now threatening to drive the country “off a cliff”.

0:42
 Hundreds of thousands attend People's Vote march in London – video
Foreign Office minister Sir Alan Duncan, the de facto deputy to foreign
secretary Jeremy Hunt, said Conservative MPs and ministers now had a duty
to show people they could deliver a sensible, moderate Brexit that was in
the national interest. But this would never be achieved if so many remained
entrenched in different ideological camps and refused to compromise.

“There simply is no ideal outcome that will suit everyone,” he said.
“People have to step back from their ideological obsessions and accept a
pragmatic compromise. Otherwise we risk inflicting on ourselves massive
economic damage, as well as political damage, domestically and
internationally, for years to come.”

He added: “This is the biggest ‘get real’ moment of my political life. The
fate of our country for decades will depend on this. It is as if we are
driving towards a cliff, but won’t face up to the reality that the road we
have chosen will take us over the edge.”

The Observer view on the urgent need for a fresh vote on Europe
 Read more
This weekend, however, there was no indication that Tory infighting over
Brexit was subsiding. Theresa May is being warned by pro-Brexit cabinet
ministers that they will vote against any deal she proposes unless they see
legal guarantees that Britain can make a clean break in the future from the
EU. Ministers including Andrea Leadsom, Penny Mordaunt, Esther McVey and
Michael Gove are among those with concerns that moves to solve the Irish
border issue could tie the UK to the EU for the long term. Tensions are
expected to surface at this week’s meeting of cabinet ministers and a key
gathering of May’s inner Brexit cabinet on Thursday.

 Tory MPs Anna Soubry and Sarah Wollaston with Labour MP Chuka Umunna at
the People’s Vote march.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest
 Tory MPs Anna Soubry and Sarah Wollaston with Labour MP Chuka Umunna at
the People’s Vote march. Photograph: Ana Cross/REX/Shutterstock
With May’s authority on the wane, Eurosceptic MPs and donors have been
openly discussing the prospect of installing David Davis, the former Brexit
secretary, as a short-term leader. A leadership challenge is triggered when
48 Tory MPs submit a letter to Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the backbench
1922 committee, demanding a contest.

The Observer has spoken to MPs considering submitting their letters this
week. “It is entirely possible that Brady will be making an announcement
this week – that is how bad things are,” said one MP. “I’m afraid the last
week has rightly reopened questions about the leadership.”


Why the lies, Boris? The best banners at march for People's Vote
Demonstrators on the march brandished placards saying “Parliament’s
divided, the people must decide it”, “Why the lies, Boris?”, and “Time for
an EU turn”.

John Bramich, who made a four-hour car journey from Stockport to take part,
said: “We hold a general election to choose a new government every five
years or less. Brexit is something far more important. Saying that it’s
undemocratic to hold another vote on it is nonsense.”

 Demonstrators carry placards labelling politicians including Boris Johnson
and Nigel Farage as liars.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest
 Demonstrators carry placards labelling politicians including Boris Johnson
and Nigel Farage as liars. Photograph: Richard Isaac/REX/Shutterstock
Rodolfo Hermans, a Chilean-German national and nanotechnology researcher at
University College London, who joined the demo, said: “The climate towards
immigrants such as myself has become terrible. This atmosphere is a true
hostile environment, and it is affecting not just those from the EU but
people from across the world.”


People's Vote: 'The last protest I went to was 47 years ago'
 Read more
A Downing Street source said there would be no second referendum: “We had a
people’s vote in 2016. A second referendum would really be a politicians’
vote – politicians telling the people they got it wrong the first time and
should try again. That would do lasting damage to faith in democracy.

Another pro-remain rally took place in Northern Ireland on Saturday, which
converged on Belfast city hall. The crowd, waving EU flags and carrying
anti-DUP placards, heard Alliance party leader, Naomi Long, describe the EU
as a force for peace.

She said the Brexit debate was not about protecting the UK’s union or
creating a united Ireland, as it has been characterised by some on opposite
sides of the issue.

 Protester on the People’s Vote march.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest
 Protester on the People’s Vote march. Photograph: Ollie Millington/Getty
Images
Long said: “This is about the people of this place coming together and
saying, just like the EU, we value cooperation, we value immigration, we
value working together in the best interests of everyone in this society.

“That is why we value the EU, it is not just a model of cooperation, it
underpins the very cooperation that we need here.”

A pro-Brexit counter-protest in Harrogate, organised by Nigel Farage, was
attended by roughly 1,200 people.

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Peace Is Doable

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