Theresa May to work for right' Brexit deal

Ms May said she wanted to make 2017 the year when barriers that hold people back are pulled down to secure a better deal for ordinary.

Update: 2017-01-01 20:16 GMT
Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May. (Photo: AP)

London: British Prime Minister Theresa May used a New Year video message on Sunday to pledge she would work towards getting the “right deal” for Britain as it prepares to leave the European Union after a “divisive” referendum.

Describing the Brexit referendum vote in June which brought her to power at Downing Street as a “momentous” yet “divisive” decision, Ms May called for a “truly united Britain” in 2017.

“I know that the referendum last June was divisive at times,” she said.

“I know, of course, that not everyone shared the same point of view, or voted in the same way. But I know too that, as we face the opportunities ahead of us, our shared interests and ambitions can bring us together.”

“These ambitions unite us, so that we are no longer the 52 per cent who voted ‘Leave’ and the 48 per cent who voted ‘Remain’, but one great union of people and nations with a proud history and a bright future,” Ms May said.

“So when I sit around the negotiating table in Europe this year, it will be with that in mind — the knowledge that I am there to get the right deal — not just for those who voted to Leave but for every single person in this country.”

Ms May said she wanted to make 2017 the year when barriers that hold people back are pulled down to secure a better deal for ordinary, working people.

“After all, it is through unity that our people have achieved great things: through our precious union of nations — England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland; through our union of people — from sports teams to armed forces; businesses to charities; schools to hospitals; and, above all, through our union of communities and families,” she said.

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