As Brexit looms, the U.K.’s Conservative Party fights for survival – NBC News

Posted: Sunday, July 21, 2019

LONDON — Britain’s 2016 referendum campaign to leave the European Union was built on positive statements about “taking back control” and giving the billions the United Kingdom spends on the 28-nation bloc to the National Health Service.

Trade deals with foreign partners would blossom, boosting the national finances and cutting bureaucratic red tape would unleash entrepreneurialism, pro-Brexit campaigners promised.

Today, the Brexit movement has become almost entirely based not on material gains but on a democratic principle — that the referendum result must be enacted no matter what. The ruling Conservative Party looks set to become the most high-profile victim of this transformation.

After almost 10 years in power and 185 years in existence, its voters and members are leaving in droves to support the upstart Brexit Party. A fractious leadership battle has been defined by who can talk the toughest on Europe — a union Britain has been part of for half a century.

Whether the party of Prime Ministers Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher, which can trace its roots back to the English Civil War, can survive the onslaught is unclear.

By Tuesday, the Conservative Party will have a new leader — who will also be the country’s new prime minister — to replace Theresa May.

Clear front-runner Boris Johnson has staked his reputation on leaving the E.U. “do-or-die” on the next deadline of Oct. 31.

Chancellor Philip Hammond — who backed remain in the 2016 vote — on Sunday became the most senior figure to declare he would resign from the government if Johnson wins, such is the finance minister’s opposition to Johnson’s hardline Brexit approach.

Boris Johnson is widely expected to win the Conservative Party leadership contest and become the U.K.’s next prime minister.Andy Buchanan / AFP – Getty Images

This illustrates what Johnson himself has highlighted as the biggest threat to the party: voters and members leaving to support both Nigel Farage’s Brexit Party on the right and the anti-Brexit Liberal Democrats on the left.

As leader of the U.K. Independence Party, career Euroskeptic Farage played a key role in pressuring then-Prime Minister David Cameron into holding a referendum and then in persuading the British public to narrowly back leaving the E.U.

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