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		Deal or no deal, we leave EU on Oct. 31: 
		UK PM candidate Johnson 
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		 [June 03, 2019] 
		By William James 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Boris Johnson, 
		frontrunner to be Britain's next prime minister, promised on Monday to 
		lead the country out of the European Union on Oct. 31 with or without an 
		exit deal, launching his leadership bid in a campaign video.
 
 Prime Minister Theresa May is due to resign on Friday having failed to 
		deliver Brexit on schedule. She leaves behind her a divided nation and 
		parliament with no consensus on the way ahead for the world's fifth 
		largest economy.
 
 Johnson, a former foreign minister who resigned in protest at May's 
		handling of Brexit, is the bookmakers' favorite to win a crowded contest 
		and take over the running of the country at its most important strategic 
		juncture in decades.
 
 "If I get in we'll come out, deal or no deal, on October the 31st," he 
		was seen telling a member of the public in a campaign video released on 
		Twitter.
 
 The launch coincided with the arrival in Britain of U.S. President 
		Donald Trump, who has thrown his weight behind Johnson by saying he 
		would do a "very good job" as British leader.
 
 
		
		 
		The race to replace May has so far focused on candidates' approach to a 
		no-deal exit from the EU - with a clear dividing line between those who 
		would countenance leaving the bloc without a formal transition 
		agreement, and those who say it would be too economically dangerous.
 
 Leadership rival Jeremy Hunt, one of the staunchest opponents of no 
		deal, told the BBC that it should only be used "in extremis" but that he 
		believed he could negotiate a better deal before Oct. 31 - the country's 
		current exit date.
 
 CUT TAXES, GET MORE MONEY
 
 Johnson is himself a divisive figure.
 
 Having led the 2016 campaign to leave the EU he is feted by those who 
		see him as a colorful straight-talker, prepared to speak truth to a 
		political establishment that has betrayed swathes of the electorate.
 
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			Former British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who is running to 
			succeed Theresa May as Prime Minister, leaves his home in London, 
			Britain, May 30, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay 
            
 
            But critics say the former Mayor of London, educated at the 
			exclusive Eton College and Oxford University, is an opportunist 
			member of the political elite seeking to get the top job at any 
			cost. He is due to appear in court over claims he lied during the 
			Brexit referendum campaign - something his lawyers have dismissed as 
			a political stunt.
 Monday's video, featuring clips of Johnson talking to voters and a 
			monologue delivered straight to camera, is his first real salvo in 
			the leadership battle which so far has 13 contenders and could take 
			two months to determine the winner.
 
 In it, he is seen touching on issues known to be important to the 
			160,000 or so Conservative members who will have the final vote on 
			Britain's next leader, once the candidate list has been whittled 
			down by Conservative lawmakers.
 
 "Cut some taxes and you get more money in," he tells another member 
			of the public, while also arguing for more investment in education, 
			infrastructure and healthcare.
 
 "Now is the time to unite our society, and unite our country. To 
			build the infrastructure, to invest in education, to improve our 
			environment, and to support our fantastic NHS (National Health 
			Service)," he said.
 
 "To lift everyone in our country, and of course, also to make sure 
			that we support our wealth creators and the businesses that make 
			that investment possible."
 
 (Reporting by William James, editing by Elizabeth Piper and Toby 
			Chopra)
 
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