

Fresh Labour splits emerged today over the partyâs pivot towards a second Brexit referendum in the wake of its disastrous European election performance.
Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott today became the latest senior Labour figure to publicly back another vote, saying they were now âforegrounding itâ as a policy.
But Labour MPs in Leave voting areas immediately warned that a shift from leading party figures risks haemorrhaging working class voters.
âWe want to be clear now. We are foregrounding what was always Labour Party policy â a peopleâs vote,â Ms Abbott told the Radio 4 Today programme.
âOur position is that ideally we want a General Election, if we canât get a General Election in time we would support a Peopleâs Vote.â
She said the party is now âmoving towards a clearer lineâ after significant criticism that they lost half their European Parliament seats because of their lack of clarity on Brexit.
Any potential ballot paper on another vote should have âRemainâ as an option, which she would personally back, she told the BBC.
Mr Corbyn said on Monday that any Brexit deal must be put to a public vote after sustained criticism that the partyâs attempt to appeal to both remain and leave backing members had failed.
Shadow Foreign Secretary Emily Thornberry said Labour should call for a second referendum and Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell said going back to the people was now the âonly optionâ.
European elections 2019
However Lisa Nandy, MP for Wigan, which voted 63.9 percent to leave the EU, told the BBC: âThere is huge frustration amongst Labour voters who voted leave in towns like mine to see leading figures from the Labour Party out calling for a second referendum before thereâs been any serious attempt to implement the result of the first.
âThis could be the final breach of trust with this working class electorate.
The influential backbencher added: âThe chances of a Labour Government without winning the trust of people in these towns is absolutely zero.â
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She warned that a second referendum would lead to a no-deal outcome.
âVery few people have changed their minds and if there is a shift in this area of the country I think itâs towards no-deal Brexit,â she said.
MP for Ashfield in Nottinghamshire, Gloria De Piero, backed Ms Nandy over Twitter saying the feeling among her constituents against a second referendum was the same.
Neither women voted for the Prime Ministerâs Brexit deal.