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For any copyright, please send me a message. Jeremy Corbyn has been repeatedly criticised over his position on Brexit in the lead up to the crucial December 12 general election. The Labour Party has said if they win the election, they will renegotiate a new deal with the European Union, before putting the deal back to the British people in the form of a second referendum. Mr Corbyn has said he will remain “neutral” in the lead up to a potential fresh national vote on the issue. But, the party have been criticised over the stance, with Brexiteers claiming the Labour Party would only be offering the choice of a soft-Brexit or Remain to the electorate. And the party’s Brexit position could be damaging Labour ahead of the December general election, according to the latest polls. A poll by YouGov, found Brits who voted for the Labour Party in 2017, but to Leave the EU in 2016, were almost twice as likely to be unsure on whether to back Mr Corbyn in the 2019 December election, than those who voted to Remain. Of those surveyed, 24 percent of Labour Leave voters "don't know" whether they should support Mr Corbyn next month. Meanwhile, 13 percent of Labour voters, who decided they wanted to Remain in the EU in 2016, said they were unsure on whether to back Mr Corbyn in the general election. The poll surveyed 11,277 Brits between November 12 to 20 asking how they intended to vote in the general election. The results will come as a warning sign to the Labour Party, as the Tories look to target traditional Labour seats in the north of England, with many overwhelmingly voting to leave in the historic EU referendum. Mr Johnson believes securing the backing of these areas will be enough to give him a majority in the election next month. Speaking in Wales on Monday, Boris Johnson announced a wave of investment once the UK has left the EU. Mr Johnson said: "When we get Brexit done, believe me we will unleash a tide of investment into this country." He said the Conservatives were the only party with a deal which was "ready to go". He got a laugh from the crowd when he referenced the Welsh word for microwave, saying: "Just pop it in the popty ping, as we say in Wales, and it's there. We could be out by January." But, it comes as the latest polls show the Conservatives lead over Labour narrow to just seven points, according to an opinion poll by ICM for Reuters showed on Monday. Support for the Conservatives fell one point to 41 percent, while the Labour Party was up two points on 34 percent. The pro-European Union Liberal Democrats were unchanged on 13 percent while the Brexit Party was down one point on four percent. ICM surveyed 2,004 people online between Nov 22 and 25. And it said that for five parties that are not contes

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