Britain has voted to leave the European Union,
results from Thursday’s referendum showed, a stunning repudiation of the nation’s
elites that deals the biggest blow to the European project of greater unity
since World War Two.
Global financial markets plunged as complete results
showed a near 52-48 percent split for leaving, on fears that the decision will
hit investment in the world’s 5th largest economy, threaten London’s role as a
global financial capital and foment uncertainty in the world’s biggest trading
bloc.
The pound suffered its biggest one-day fall in
history, falling more than 10 percent against the dollar to hit levels last
seen in 1985, while the euro slumped more than 3 percent.
“It’s a momentous day. It’s an extraordinary event
and the it will change the course of British history," said British
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond who had campaigned for a "Remain"
vote.
The leader of the anti-EU UK Independence Party,
Nigel Farage, hailed it as "independence day".
Quitting the EU could cost Britain access to the
EU’s trade barrier-free single market and mean it must seek new trade accords
with countries around the world. President Barack Obama says it would be at the
"back of a queue" for a U.S. pact.
The EU for its part will be economically and
politically weakened, facing the departure not only of its most free-market
proponent but also a member with a U.N. Security Council veto and powerful
army. In one go, the bloc will lose around a sixth of its economic output.
The vote will initiate at least two years of divorce
proceedings with the EU, the first exit by any member state. Prime Minister
David Cameron is expected to notify his European counterparts within days.
Cameron had called the referendum in 2013 in a bid
to head off pressure from local eurosceptics, including within his own party,
and had led the campaign for a "Remain" vote.
His political future is now in doubt, with his
Conservative Party rival Boris Johnson, the former London mayor who became the
most recognizable face of the "leave" camp, now widely tipped to seek
his job.
But Foreign Secretary Hammond said Cameron would
stay on. "What the country needs now is a sense of continuity and
stability," he said.
Futures trading predicted massive opening losses on
share markets across Europe. Britain’s FTSE futures and Germany’s Dax futures
fell about 9 percent. The euro zone’s Euro Stoxx 50 futures sank more than 11
percent. Investors poured into safe-haven assets including gold, and the yen
surged.
"We’re in uncharted territory," an aide
working in Cameron’s office told reporters.
Yet there was euphoria among Britain’s eurosceptic
forces, claiming a victory over the political establishment, big business and
foreign leaders including U.S. President Barack Obama who had urged Britain to
stay in.
"Dare to dream that the dawn is breaking on an
independent United Kingdom," said Nigel Farage, leader of the eurosceptic
UK Independence Party. "This will be a victory for real people, a victory
for ordinary people, a victory for decent people … Let June 23 go down in our
history as our independence day."
Asked if Cameron should resign, Farage said:
"Immediately."
The United Kingdom itself now faces a threat to its
survival, as Scotland voted 62 percent in favor of staying in the EU and is
likely to press for a new referendum on whether to become independent after its
2014 vote to stay in the UK.
Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said
Thursday’s vote "makes clear that the people of Scotland see their future
as part of the European Union". Northern Ireland’s largest Irish
nationalist party, Sinn Fein, said the result intensified the case for a vote
on whether to quit the United Kingdom.
European politicians reacted with shock. "Please
tell me I’m still sleeping and this is all just a bad nightmare!" former
Finnish Prime Minister Alexander Stubb tweeted.
The world’s biggest trading bloc could even face an
existential crisis as surging populist and anti-immigrant movements across the
continent issue their own calls to quit. Far-right leaders in France and the
Netherlands immediately demanded referendums of their own.
French National Front leader Marine Le Pen declared
"Victory for freedom!". Dutch far right leader Geert Wilders said:
“We want be in charge of our own country, our own money, our own borders, and
our own immigration policy."
ANTI-ESTABLISHMENT
Britain, which joined the then European Economic
Community (EEC) in 1973, has always been an ambivalent member. A firm supporter of free trade, tearing down
internal economic barriers and expanding the EU to take in ex-communist eastern
states, it opted out of joining the euro single currency or the Schengen
border-free zone.
Cameron’s ruling Conservatives in particular have
risked being torn apart by euroscepticism for generations.
World leaders including Obama, Chinese President Xi
Jinping, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, NATO and Commonwealth governments had
all urged a "Remain" vote, saying Britain would be stronger and more
influential in the EU than outside.
The four-month campaign was among the divisive ever
waged in Britain, with accusations of lying and scare-mongering on both sides
and rows on immigration which critics said at times unleashed overt racism.
It also revealed deeper splits in British society,
with the pro-Brexit side drawing support from millions of voters who felt left
behind by globalization and believed they saw no benefits from Britain’s ethnic
diversity and free-market economy.
A pro-EU member of parliament was stabbed and shot
to death in the street a week ago by an attacker who later told a court his
name was "Death to traitors, freedom for Britain".
Older voters backed Brexit; the young mainly wanted
to stay in.
But in the end, concerns over uncontrolled
immigration, loss of sovereignty and remote rule from Brussels appear to have
trumped almost unanimous warnings of the economic perils of going it alone.
"People are concerned about how they have been
treated with austerity and how their wages have been frozen for about seven
years," said John McDonnell, finance spokesman for the opposition Labour
Party, which had favored a Remain vote.
"A lot of people’s grievances have come out and
we have got to start listening to them."
Culled from Reuters
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