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UK Conservative Party Civil War Explodes as Brexit Support Rises

© AFP 2023 / Will OliverBritish Prime Minister David Cameron (R) and London Mayor Boris Johnson (L) pointing at each other on August 24, 2012.
British Prime Minister David Cameron (R) and London Mayor Boris Johnson (L) pointing at each other on August 24, 2012. - Sputnik International
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The civil war inside the UK Conservative Party has deepened with senior figures launching a series of attacks at one another as Brexit campaigning continues. The infighting comes as a new poll suggests support for leaving the EU is surging among the British public.

With two and a half weeks until the June 23 referendum, officials from the Leave and Remain camps have ramped up their attacks on one another, with Prime Minister David Cameron slammed over his decision to share a platform with opposition and left-wing parties — Labour, the Liberal-Democrats and the Greens — in campaigning to remain in the EU.

Euroskeptic MP and fellow Conservative Andrew Rosindell said Cameron's actions were a "slap in the face" to party members.

"It's crass, disappointing and it's a slap in the face to all of us who worked so hard to stop the left-wing parties win a majority in the election last year," Rosindell told the Telegraph.

"I think it smacks of desperation that he's willing to share platforms with people who have far left opinions, way beyond what the Conservative party has ever endorsed."

Cameron himself however, wasn't lying down though, releasing a joint-statement with the other party leaders accusing senior Leave officials Boris Johnson and Michael Gove of being "reckless and undemocratic" by failing to outline an economic plan if Britain leaves the EU.

​"They are perpetuating an economic con‐trick on the British people, and we're calling time on it," the joint statement read.

'Court Jester' and a 'Vengeful Man'

The attacks between opposing Conservative Party figures continued, with former Prime Minister Sir John Major describing Leave campaigner Boris Johnson as a "court jester," while accusing the Euroskeptics of running a "squalid" campaign.

"On the subject that they have veered towards, having lost the economic argument, of immigration, I think their campaign is verging on the squalid," he told the BBC.

While Johnson himself warned that there has been "too much of this blue on blue action" in regards to attacks within the Conservative Party, fellow Euroskeptic Jacob Rees-Mogg launched a scathing attack on Sir John for his comments.

"What we've had today are the bitter ramblings of a vengeful man. I'm going to sling the mud straight back at Sir John Major, a knight of the garter who ought to know how to behave better. It's all to do with his bitterness over his failings that came from the Exchange Rate Mechanism that tarnished his whole prime ministership," he told BBC Radio 4.

Support for Brexit Rising

The bitter fallout within the Conservative Party comes as two new polls suggest support for leaving the EU is rising.

A YouGov poll showed the Leave campaign leading with 45 percent, ahead of Remain on 41 percent, while there were 14 percent of respondents who were undecided.

Meanwhile, a separate TNS survey found the Leave vote ahead of remain by 43 percent to 41 percent.

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