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		As Brexit crunch nears, campaign for new 
		referendum gathers pace 
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		 [December 07, 2018] 
		By Andrew MacAskill 
 LONDON (Reuters) - After losing the most 
		contentious referendum in British history, James McGrory went for a 
		drink in The Hope pub near London's medieval meat market. Amid butchers 
		in bloodied coats, his dream of reversing Brexit seemed hopeless.
 
 Two years later, with the country in crisis over how or whether to leave 
		the European Union, McGrory is feeling more confident that his campaign 
		can help secure another referendum that he hopes would overturn the 2016 
		result.
 
 The idea of a second referendum has been gathering support from some 
		senior British politicians and seems to have traction with sections of 
		public opinion, but the political situation is so uncertain that it is 
		hard to say whether this will actually translate into another vote, and 
		when or how that might done, or what question might be put.
 
 "We have gone from being seen as a fringe view, dismissed and laughed 
		at, to now being at the center of the Brexit debate," McGrory, the 
		36-year-old campaign director of the People's Vote campaign, said in an 
		interview.
 
		
		 
		
 "The odds are getting shorter every day that we get another referendum. 
		All the momentum is with our campaign."
 
 Betting odds show there is a 43 percent probability of an EU referendum 
		before 2020. Gamblers think there is a 55 percent probability that 
		Britain does not leave as planned on March 29.
 
 Opinion polls suggest there has been a slight shift by voters towards 
		remaining in the EU, but the public remains broadly split down the 
		middle.
 
 It remains unclear how exactly a second vote might be called, though 
		some lawmakers have drafted a detailed roadmap, setting out possible 
		legislative routes to another referendum.
 
 Meanwhile, campaigners for another vote are busy lobbying parliament and 
		trying to drum up public support with rallies and on social and 
		mainstream media. They note Prime Minister Theresa May has included 
		their desired outcome as one of three options facing the country: her 
		deal, no deal or reversing Brexit.
 
 U.S. investment bank J.P. Morgan said the chances of Britain calling off 
		Brexit had increased after a string of parliamentary defeats for May 
		cast new doubt over her plan to quit the bloc.
 
 VOTE REVERSED?
 
 Turning Brexit upside down would mark one of the most extraordinary 
		reversals in modern British history and likely alienate the 17.4 million 
		people who voted to leave the EU.
 
 The path to a new referendum is fraught with crisis.
 
 May's Brexit deal has first to be voted down in parliament on Dec. 11. 
		Second, her government has to endure an attempt by the opposition Labour 
		Party to topple it and then call a national election.
 
 With the clock ticking down to March 29 and financial markets pricing in 
		what would be a potentially disorderly exit, McGrory and his campaigners 
		hope Britain's politicians will accept they have come to a dead end and 
		throw the question back to voters.
 
 David Lammy, a Labour lawmaker, said that after parliament fails to 
		reach a consensus it will reluctantly agree to hold another referendum 
		as the best among a limited number of escape routes to avoid a 
		potentially chaotic exit.
 
		
		 
		
 "We will probably end up going round and round in circles and when 
		politics is stuck and cannot reach compromise then the only way to get 
		out of that is to go back to the people," Lammy told Reuters.
 
 Lammy said that the situation may resemble Charles Dickens' novel Bleak 
		House, which revolves around a will settlement that has been in court so 
		long that few of the participants can remember the original arguments.
 
 A new referendum can only be called if it is approved by parliament. 
		This could be either put forward by the government or by rebels.
 
 PIPE DREAM?
 
 The hurdles to another referendum are high.
 
 Both major political parties are committed to leaving the EU in 
		accordance with the 2016 referendum.
 
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			James McGrory, Director of People's Vote political campaign group, 
			stands for a portrait on Lambeth Bridge in central London, Britain 
			November 29, 2018. Picture taken November 29, 2018. REUTERS/Toby 
			Melville 
            
 
            Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, who voted against membership of 
			the European Community in a 1975 referendum, has indicated he is not 
			keen on another referendum now.
 His party has said they will only support another referendum if the 
			deal is voted down and they fail to force a general election.
 
 Some trade union leaders opposed another referendum because they 
			feel it would be seen as betrayal by millions of Brexit supporters 
			in Labour's electoral heartlands.
 
 Brexit supporters say the 2016 vote must be respected. "It is wholly 
			dangerous for us to turn to the people now and say, 'You let us 
			down. You got it wrong'," said Nigel Evans, a Conservative MP.
 
 Even if parliament did agree in principle to a second referendum, 
			Britain would then have to ask for an extension to its timetable for 
			leaving the EU to allow enough time for a campaign, probably by 
			withdrawing its Article 50 departure notification.
 
 On Tuesday, just hours before a five-day parliamentary debate on 
			May's deal, an adviser to the European Court of Justice said Britain 
			could revoke its formal divorce notice. The court is due to rule on 
			Dec. 10.
 
 Even if there was a change in mood there would be controversy about 
			what the question would be and whether another referendum would 
			deliver a different result.
 
 UNDERDOG?
 
 After the failure of the 2016 campaign, pro-Europeans turned on each 
			other and blamed what they saw as the chicanery of their opponents 
			on the Brexit campaign.
 
 But in the wake of their defeat, a small group of influential 
			politicians, journalists and campaigners started to hatch a plan to 
			keep Britain inside the club it joined in 1973.
 
 
             
			They had to face unpalatable truths.
 
 Their 2016 campaign had been riven with rivalry, damaged by its 
			association with then-Prime Minister David Cameron, underperformed 
			on social media and was cast by opponents as the voice of the 
			establishment arguing for the status quo.
 
 In recent months, pro-EU campaigners have been feeling more 
			optimistic. In October, the People's Vote organized a march of 
			almost 700,000 people through London demanding another vote.
 
 "The tables have turned," said McGrory. "We are the underdog. We are 
			the scrappy campaign that is doing things a bit differently."
 
 In the last month, two ministers have resigned calling for another 
			referendum.
 
 Three of the four former British prime ministers still alive - John 
			Major, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown - have also said a second 
			referendum is the way to resolve the crisis.
 
 The mood in the headquarters of the People's Vote in Millbank Tower 
			close to parliament is bullish.
 
 Young people examine charts of target audiences and organize an 
			advertising blitz to convince lawmakers to block the government's 
			deal.
 
 "If anyone thinks Brexit is a done deal they should be ready for 
			another surprise," McGrory said.
 
 (Reporting by Andrew MacAskill; Additional reporting by William 
			James; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Giles Elgood)
 
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