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Labour leader Corbyn says UK govt ‘unfit’ to negotiate Brexit

British opposition Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn speaks in Freston, near Peterborough, central England, on January 10, 2017, outling the party’s plan for Brexit and its vision for Britain © AFP / Ben STANSALL

Peterborough, United Kingdom, Jan 10 – British opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn accused Prime Minister Theresa May’s government on Tuesday of being “unfit” to negotiate Brexit, saying it has no plan and cannot make a success of leaving the European Union.

“At no point since the Second World War has Britain’s ruling elite so recklessly put the country in such an exposed position without any plan,” the Labour leader told supporters in Peterborough, central England.

“As a result they’re now reduced to repeating ‘Brexit means Brexit’. They’re unfit to negotiate it.”

Corbyn, who campaigned for Britain to stay in the EU, said he accepted the result of the June referendum and would not block May’s plans to begin exit negotiations by the end of March.

But he warned his centre-left party would fight for continued “full access” to the EU’s single market, and for a deal that put “decent jobs and living standards first”.

“There can be no question of giving Theresa May’s Tories a free pass in the Brexit negotiations to entrench and instill further the failed free market policies in post-Brexit Britain,” he said.

May has yet to outline her negotiating strategy, but has made clear she wants to end unrestricted immigration from the rest of the EU — a key element of single market membership.

Corbyn is a strong advocate of free movement of labour, but some of his MPs fear this position is alienating voters concerned about the impact of mass migration.

In his speech Tuesday, he said he wanted to stop cheap migrant labour that undercut British workers’ wages, but said he would prioritise access to the single market.

He accused the government of blaming migrants for overstretched public services, which he argued were the result of six years of austerity.

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Labour has been languishing in the polls for months. The latest YouGov survey put them on 26 percent, compared to 39 percent for May’s ruling Conservatives.

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