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Boris Johnson speech: Foreign Secretary attacks ‘gloomadon-poppers’ predicting grim post-Brexit future | |
(35 minutes later) | |
Boris Johnson claimed Brexit will free Britain to be “more active on the world stage than ever before”, in a typically joke-heavy conference speech. | Boris Johnson claimed Brexit will free Britain to be “more active on the world stage than ever before”, in a typically joke-heavy conference speech. |
The Foreign Secretary delighted the Tory faithful with an attack on the “gloomadon-poppers” who still predicted a grim future after Britain’s departure from the EU. | The Foreign Secretary delighted the Tory faithful with an attack on the “gloomadon-poppers” who still predicted a grim future after Britain’s departure from the EU. |
Instead, Mr Johnson argued, that exit would see Britain “liberated” to punch its weight in foreign affairs, as well as free to strike free trade deals with countries around the world. | Instead, Mr Johnson argued, that exit would see Britain “liberated” to punch its weight in foreign affairs, as well as free to strike free trade deals with countries around the world. |
He told the conference: “I have to tell any lingering gloomadon-poppers that never once have I felt that this country would be in any way disadvantaged by extricating ourselves from the EU treaties. | He told the conference: “I have to tell any lingering gloomadon-poppers that never once have I felt that this country would be in any way disadvantaged by extricating ourselves from the EU treaties. |
“Indeed, there are some ways in which we will be liberated to be more active on the world stage than ever before – because we are not leaving Europe. | |
“We will remain committed to all kinds of European cooperation, at an intergovernmental level – whether it is maintaining sanctions against Russia for what is happening in Ukraine, or sending our Navy to help the Italians stem the migrant flow through the central Mediterranean. | |
“But we will also be able to speak up more powerfully with our own distinctive voice leading the world as we now are, in imposing a ban on ivory, helping to save the elephant in a way that the disunited EU is unable to do. | “But we will also be able to speak up more powerfully with our own distinctive voice leading the world as we now are, in imposing a ban on ivory, helping to save the elephant in a way that the disunited EU is unable to do. |
“Or relaunching the cause of global free trade that has been stalled since the failure of the Doha round.” | “Or relaunching the cause of global free trade that has been stalled since the failure of the Doha round.” |
Mr Johnson slipped in an attack on the BBC, even as he hailed it as “the single greatest and most effective ambassador for our culture and our values”. | Mr Johnson slipped in an attack on the BBC, even as he hailed it as “the single greatest and most effective ambassador for our culture and our values”. |
He offered his praise for the corporation “no matter how infuriating and shamelessly anti-Brexit they can sometimes be”. | He offered his praise for the corporation “no matter how infuriating and shamelessly anti-Brexit they can sometimes be”. |
The Foreign Secretary also argued Britain’s hard power was “dwarfed” by the soft power that flowed from English being the most commonly-spoken language on earth. | The Foreign Secretary also argued Britain’s hard power was “dwarfed” by the soft power that flowed from English being the most commonly-spoken language on earth. |
But the former Tory leadership-hopeful also painted a grim picture of the state of the world as he accused Russia of being “complicit” in carrying out war crimes in Syria. | |
Mr Johnson said the UK’s hope and belief that liberal democracy could be expanded across the world had been “badly damaged” by the Iraq War. | |
Meanwhile, free market capitalism had been “seriously discredited by the crash of 2008, and the global suspicion of bankers”. | Meanwhile, free market capitalism had been “seriously discredited by the crash of 2008, and the global suspicion of bankers”. |
Likening those two issues to “punches”, Mr Johnson said: “It is partly as a result of that lack of western self-confidence – political, military, economic – that, in some material ways, the world has got less safe, more dangerous and more worrying.” |
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