Former British Prime Minister David Cameron, in his memoirs released Sunday, launched a violent attack against British current leader Boris Johnson.
He took office in July, believing that a campaign that would allow Britain to leave the European Union during the 2016 referendum would make him the “representative” of the Conservative Party.
He said he personally believed Johnson needed a second referendum to confirm Brexit's terms.
In an excerpt from the Sunday Times newspaper, Cameron (which led the "leftover" campaign to stay in the EU) was accused of "rib" rivals lying to the public.
He said that one of Johnson and his Cameron's close friends, Michael Gove, was "an ambassador for the era of populism that destroys experts and truly twists during the campaign."
52-year-old Cameron has blinded the public since he set foot on the historic Brexit vote results.
However, the publication of his memoirs took place at an explosive time, and the UK fell into political turmoil ahead of the scheduled exit from the October 31 block.
Johnson desperately seeks to negotiate a divorce with Brussels, but insisted that Britain would not leave even if needed after Congress blocked a “no deal” exit.
– 'I was leaving'–
Cameron said he was trying to stop Johnson from participating in the Brexit campaign.
But he went on to say that "because it contributed to a political career, it led to unbelievable results."
Johnson believed that the "Leave" camp would be lost, and that if it were won, "new negotiations could follow and a second referendum could follow."
"When the Tori politician takes the initiative on the Brexit side, people who are full of patriotism, independence and romance will be the most beloved of the party," Cameron said.
During the campaign, Johnson and Gove said, "It has become an ambassador for the populist era, attacking their own government, blindly turning to their nasty behavior, destroying experts and truly twisting."
Cameron condemned the savings campaign's claim that Britain ended the EU entry fee and reduced the likelihood that Turkey would join the block.
“We were no longer spreading the truth, but in the realm of totally abandoning it. The vacation was a lie, ”he wrote.
He said that Gove was referring to Euro Turkish politician Nigel Farage, which "was a Paulist warning that the whole Turkey came to England."
Cameron said he had a "asymmetric war", feeling that he could not fight back as prime minister.
-& # 39; very confident & # 39; –
Cameron said there was no regret for a referendum in an excerpt from the long-awaited memoir “For The Record” released Thursday.
But he said he was "desperately" worried about what would happen next, and that terrible negotiations were "not interested."
His immediate successor Theresa May negotiated a condition of departure from Brussels last year, but Congress refused her three times and quit her.
Johnson vowed to complete Brexit but warned that EU leaders would not renegotiate, but Congress still split deeply on how to proceed.
On Monday, he will meet with European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker and Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier in Luxembourg.
In an interview with Sunday's postal mail, President Johnson said his team was making "huge progress" at the talks and was confident he could negotiate before the EU leaders' summit on October 17.
In a bizarre analogy, Johnson compared England to the cartoon character Hulk.
"The more Hulk gets, the more Hulk gets stronger, he seems to be tightly bound, but always escapes," he said.
Johnson insisted that without negotiation, Britain would leave the EU anyway.
Source Link : https://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2019/09/15/ex-pm-cameron-slams-johnson-over-brexit/