British Prime Minister Theresa May has sacked Michael Heseltine, a
senior figure in her Conservative Party, from various advisory roles for
rebelling against the government in a Brexit vote in the House of
Lords.
Heseltine, 83, a former deputy prime minister nicknamed “Tarzan” for
his mane of hair, said he was called away from dinner with his wife late
Tuesday to be sacked.
“My preoccupation has been from the very beginning that I believe
that the referendum result is the most disastrous peacetime result that
we’ve seen in this country,” he told BBC radio on Wednesday.
Heseltine, who had
been working three to four days a week in an advisory role for the
government, said he was surprised at the suddenness of his sacking since
his position on Britain leaving the European Union was already well
known.
He said the prime minister had “entirely the right” to sack him but
added: “I’m sorry that the expertise which I have put at the
government’s disposal over the last six years has now come to an end”.
“However, in the last resort, I believe… the future of this country
is inextricably interwoven with our European friends,” said Heseltine, a
former defence minister who was once seen as a possible future prime
minister.
“It’s the duty of parliament to assert its sovereignty in determining
the legacy we leave to new generations of young people,” he said.
He was one of 13 Conservatives in parliament’s unelected upper House
of Lords who voted for an amendment proposed by the opposition Labour
Party on Tuesday that would give parliament the final say on how Britain
leaves the EU.
The amended bill empowering May to begin Brexit is due to go before
parliament again next week and the government has said it plans to
trigger the two-year EU divorce proceedings by the end of this month.
The sacking was interpreted by some commentators as a warning to
potential Conservative rebels in the elected lower House of Commons not
to vote against the government.
AFP

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