Labour's deputy leader Tom Watson has said the party must fully commit to supporting a second referendum on Brexit to have any chance of winning the next general election.

He said he feared the results of the European elections would show voters had deserted the party, blaming Labour's ambiguous position on a second public vote.

Writing in The Observer, he said: "For our party's sake, but most of all for Britain's sake, Labour needs to find some backbone on Brexit, find our voice - and do it fast.

"Our performance (in the European elections) is a direct result of our mealy-mouthed backing for a public vote on Brexit when it is being demanded loud and clear by the overwhelming majority of our members and voters."

Image: Promo

He added: "Polls show Labour has been losing up to four times more voters to parties giving full backing to a people's vote than to Farage. And those same polls show we would have beaten him by a country mile if we had unambiguously backed a public vote on any form of Brexit.


"Once results are in, we must channel our frustration into winning those voters back. Never again can Labour policy on the most crucial issue of our generation be on the wrong side of its members and voters."

Before the European elections, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn saw off an attempt by pro-EU members to commit the party to a confirmatory referendum on any Brexit deal.

Corbyn calls for immediate general election

The party's ruling National Executive Committee agreed its manifesto would instead stick to the wording of a motion passed by Labour conference last year, which keeps a public vote on the table as a last option.

Mr Watson said the decision was made by a "small number of people" and should instead be made by party members.

:: Listen to the Sophy Ridge on Sunday podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

He also promised to support calls for Labour's Brexit policy to be changed before the autumn party conference.

"I fear that unless our policy on Brexit changes we will not have the opportunity to be the radical reforming government that so many millions of people in our country need," he said.

"The campaign to change that begins now."

:: Follow the results of the European elections live on Sky News and on the Sky News app as they are announced from 10pm tonight