Former Prime Minister David Cameron today defended his decision to call a referendum on Britain's membership of the European Union, that resulted in a shock vote in favour of Brexit and also cost him his premiership.
"I believe and still believe that the fact that we hadn't had a referendum on this issue for 40 years, despite the fact that the European Union was changing...Was actually beginning to poison British politics - it was certainly poisoning politics in my own party," he said during a speech at Depauw University in Indiana titled 'The Historic Events of 2016 and Where We Go From Here' as part of a US-wide tour.
"And I think, more broadly people felt 'well, we have been promised referendums and they haven't been delivered' and people were beginning to feel very frustrated about this issue.
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Britain voted 52 to 48 per cent in favour of Brexit on June 23. The shock vote to leavethe 28-member European Union cost Cameron his job as Prime Minister, leading to his resignation a day after the referendum.
Cameron said "populism" had cost him his job and, in a question and answer session following his speech, he said: "So far these three events - the Brexit referendum, the election of President Trump, the referendum in Italy - I'm sure people are going to write about this movement of unhappiness and concern about the state of the world."
Cameron, who was recently in India, has since set up a new company - The Office of David Cameron Ltd - to launch his new speaking career around the world.
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