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The People’s Vote march: Brexit protest sees half a million take to the streets

Anti-Brexit campaigners take part in the People's Vote march. Photo: Yui Mok/PA Wire - Credit: PA

Organisers estimate a crowd of more than 500,000 at ‘the biggest demonstration on Brexit yet.’

As many as 570,000 people have come together in the capital to protest the progression of Brexit, say The People’s Vote campaign.

The march, hosting speakers including celebrity cook Delia Smith, Dragons’ Den businesswoman Deborah Meaden and London Mayor Sadiq Khan, set off from Park Lane and is expected to end in a rally in Parliament Square.

Speaking ahead of his platform appearance, Khan said: ‘Today will go down as an historic moment in our democracy. A moment when in their thousands, people from every corner of our country and every section of our society will take to the streets – coming to make our voice heard.

‘We’ve heard some complain that a public vote would be undemocratic and unpatriotic. But the opposite is true. There’s nothing more democratic – nothing more British – than trusting the people to have the final say on our future.

‘The lies, the mistruths and the deceptions of the referendum campaign have now been exposed, and it’s clear the will of the people is changing. No one voted to leave the EU to make themselves poorer. No one voted to make life harder for our children and grandchildren. No one voted to see our NHS damaged. And no one voted for the shambles that this Government has created.’

In a video message of support, Nicola Sturgeon, the First Minister of Scotland, said: ‘Let me say this loudly and clearly, if the issue comes before the House of Commons, SNP MPs will support a People’s Vote which includes the option to remain in the EU.’

She added: ‘The Tory government’s handling of these negotiations has been chaotic, incompetent and shambolic.

‘Having spent two years telling us that no deal was better than a bad deal, the Prime Minister is now preparing to pile pressure on MPs to vote for a bad or blindfold deal on the grounds that ‘no deal’ would be catastrophic.

‘She is trying to scare the UK into the frying pan out of fear of the fire. It is a scandal and it should not be accepted.’

Delia Smith said people were not fully informed when they voted but now understood ‘the dire consequences’.

‘The only way we can avoid this total madness and win back our future has to be a People’s Vote.’

The march was led by a group of young voters calling for a second referendum. Emily Longman, 20, said she was four months too young to vote in the referendum.

Longman, who was marching alongside Emma Stevens, also 20, said: ‘We’re both Spanish students due to study abroad next year, but no one knows what will happen with Erasmus funding.’

Joe Trickey, from Croydon, was celebrating his 83rd birthday at the march.

He said: ‘I believe very strongly in the EU as a place of peace and strength.

‘Going out puts us in isolation and leaving isn’t about trade deals, it’s about our values.’

According to The People’s Vote campaign, the march is ‘the biggest demonstration on Brexit yet’ and the second biggest demonstration this century behind the 1 million estimated to have protested against the Iraq War in 2003.

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