Politics

Johnson blames Corbyn for ‘die in a ditch’ broken Brexit pledge, claims he did NOT want election

Prime Minister Boris Johnson is blaming the failure to deliver on his “die in a ditch” promise to quit the EU on October 31 on Jeremy Corbyn.

Despite the pledge that he would rather be “dead in a ditch” than seek a Brexit delay beyond Halloween, the PM tried to suggest it was the Labour leader’s fault the UK’s withdrawal from the EU had been put back until January 31.

-Even though it was Boris Johnson who decided to stop Parliament debating his Brexit deal to hold an election.

‘I didn’t want an election’ claims Boris Johnson after repeatedly trying to win votes for one

Ahead of visits to stuff that has suffered from a decade of austerity – a school, hospital and police unit on Thursday, Boris Johnson said: “Today should have been the day that Brexit was delivered and we finally left the EU.

“But, despite the great new deal I agreed with the EU, Jeremy Corbyn refused to allow that to happen – insisting upon more dither, more delay and more uncertainty for families and business.

“We cannot continue along this path. I didn’t want an election – like the country I wanted to get Brexit done, but it is the only way forward.”

As the general election campaign cranked into gear, the PM added: “The public wants and expects the Government to give them hope and to improve their opportunities.

“This is exactly what my Government has been doing for the past 99 days and exactly what my Government will continue to do if the public choose the Conservatives in this election.

“I want next year to be a great year for our country – with more investment in frontline NHS services, the recruitment of thousands more police officers to reduce violent crime and investment in every one of our primary and secondary schools across the country,” Johnson added, mentioning the services that his government had cut under a decade of austerity.

And Johnson added his election mantra, that he looks set to repeat throughout the election campaign: “the alternative is for the people of this country to spend the next year, which should be a glorious year, going through the toxic, tedious torpor of two more referendums – on EU membership and Scottish independence – thanks to Jeremy Corbyn’s incessant indecision.”

‘That failure is his alone’

But pre-empting Johnson’s attempts to shift the blame for stopping Brexit from proceeding through parliament by calling an election, Jeremy Corbyn launched the Labour campaign, insisting: “that failure is his alone.”

Corbyn expertly trolled the Prime Minister, raising peals of laughter by just mentioning the date.

Analysis reveals the devastating cost of Johnson’s deal

Meanwhile, Boris Johnson’s Brexit deal will leave the UK £70 billion worse off than if it had remained in the EU, a shocking new study has found.

Research by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) has revealed that GDP would be 3.5 per cent lower in 10 years’ time under the deal.

Ditch photo credit BREXIT COMIC

RELATED: Jeremy Corbyn challenges Boris Johnson to head-to-head TV debates

Ben Gelblum

Contributing & Investigations Editor & Director of Growth wears glasses and curly hair cool ideas to: ben.gelblum (at) thelondoneconomic.com @BenGelblum

Published by