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Brexit: Older generation with nostalgia for Empire has 'shafted' Britain's youth, says Vince Cable | Brexit: Older generation with nostalgia for Empire has 'shafted' Britain's youth, says Vince Cable |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Older Brexit voters with views “coloured by nostalgia from an imperial past” have “shafted” the young, Sir Vince Cable has said. | |
The Lib Dem leader has lashed out at hardline Brexit “martyrs” who view economic pain as a price worth paying to break away from Brussels. | |
Writing in the Mail on Sunday, he accused them of “masochism” and claimed older voters had imposed their will on a younger generation more comfortable with the European Union. | |
Sir Vince’s strongly worded attack came after a YouGov poll suggested 61 per cent of Leave voters would consider significant damage to the British economy to be a price worth paying for leaving the EU. | |
He wrote: “To describe such masochism as ‘martyrdom’ is dangerous. We haven’t yet heard about ‘Brexit jihadis’ but there is an undercurrent of violence in the language which is troubling.” | |
Sir Vince, 74, added that the “self-declared martyrs” appeared to be “predominantly elderly”. | |
“The martyrdom of the old comes cheap, since few have jobs to lose,” he said. | |
The housing market, pensions and government policies – including some which were brought in while he was in the Cabinet – had contributed to a “growing rift” between the generations. | |
“The old have comprehensively shafted the young. And the old have had the last word about Brexit, imposing a world view coloured by nostalgia for an imperial past on a younger generation much more comfortable with modern Europe,” he said. | |
Meanwhile, Whitehall sources sought to play down speculation that Theresa May would be prepared to pay a Brexit bill of £36bn, as part of a deal to strike a free trade agreement with Brussels. | |
The so-called “divorce” bill has been one of the main stumbling blocks in Brexit negotiations between the Government and Brussels. | |
The Sunday Telegraph reported that the Government will only agree to pay the sum if the EU treats it as part of a deal on future relations – including the comprehensive trade agreement sought by the Prime Minister. | |
The EU’s stance is that trade talks cannot begin until significant progress has been made on the financial settlement, citizens’ rights and Northern Ireland. | |
The newspaper quoted a senior Whitehall source saying the EU’s position is that the fee should be €60bn (£54bn), but the “actual bottom line” was €50bm (£45bn). | |
The UK’s position was quoted as €30bn (£27bn) and “the landing zone is €40bn (£36bn), even if the public and politicians are not all there yet”. | |
A senior Government source told the Press Association “no such figure has been agreed” while another Whitehall source said it was “speculation”. | |
Officials at the Brexit department would not comment on the report but referred to David Davis’s acknowledgement that the Government would work with Brussels “to determine a fair settlement of the UK’s rights and obligations”. | |
Additional reporting by Press Association | Additional reporting by Press Association |
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