Sentences with phrase «back continued membership»

David Miliband has warned Jeremy Corbyn he risks being the «midwife» of a Brexit which threatens people's living standards by failing to back continued membership of the single market.
Over 800,000 jobs depend on Britain's overwhelmingly foreign - owned car industry and big carmakers backed continued membership during the campaign, seeing benefits from open trade and standardized rules.
The SNP complains that the Scottish Tories have indulged in yet another Brexit flip - flop, Davidson having campaigned for a Remain vote and initially backed continuing membership of the Single Market.

Not exact matches

Cuomo similarly expects labor will continue to back him, including its membership.
This would have begun back in the autumn, with the shadow cabinet and PLP coalescing around a clear position, spoken of publicly only as one of a number of options under consideration: continued membership of the single market with immediate application of an emergency brake on immigration, and a drive for serious reform to free movement.
But the immediate task is to rebuild the Lib Dems as a campaigning party, continuing to grow the membership — which has jumped by 18,000 since polling day — and winning back council seats before attempting to get more MPs elected in 2020.
Meanwhile the SLF will continue to do all we can to ensure that the words «freedom from poverty» quoted on the backs of our membership cards ring true in Government.
Will they continue to have faith MPs who have wickedly engaged in sabotage of a leader currently backed by two - thirds of the membership?
He said: «I'm pleased my party is backing continued customs union membership, but we need to go further.
Barry Gardiner has suggested that Labour could back the UK's continued membership of the single market after Brexit - a day after John McDonnell ruled it out.
Asked about the Umunna argument, and when it was put to her that a lot of Labour supporters would expect the party to back continuing EEA membership, Thornberry replied:
If the outcome is to pull out, there will be political conflagration, after which calls to go back in, or to hold a second referendum in favour of continuing membership once the terms have been re-renegotiated, would start to be heard.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z