Patel, who has a seat in the UK Cabinet as minister for employment and also serves as Prime Minister David Cameron's IndianDiaspora Champion, is now expected to play an active role on the front-benches of British politics.
"India is a growing market with the fastest growing working age population of any other major economy - but it is a market that we are forbidden from striking a trade deal with because it is against EU rules...After we Vote Leave, the UK would be free to negotiate its own far-reaching trade deals withIndiaand dozens of other growing economies. It will be a boost to India-UK ties,"she had told PTI ahead of the vote.
"They (her parents and grandparents] worked hard to give us a good future and play a positive role in British life. But while we remain a member of the EU, the businesses that we have worked hard to establish are at risk from costly red tape and regulations from Brussels.
"By leaving the EU, we can replace EU red tape with sensible rules that promote the entrepreneurial spirit that we have in abundance. We send 350 million pounds a week to Brussels, this is money that could be spent on our priorities like the NHS (National Health Service)," she said, alongside fellow Indian-origin first-time Conservative party MP Rishi Sunak - the son-in-law of Infosys chief Narayana Murthy.
The 52-48 per cent result in favour of Brexit indicates that the crucial estimate of 16.8 per cent of undecided votes among the 1.2 million Indian-origin electorate of the UK seem to have been won over by at least some of their arguments.
She had also spearheaded a full-blown curry clash over the "unfair immigration rules" that favour EU migrants over non-EU workers from countries like India.
"Ourcurryhouses are becoming the victims of the EU's uncontrolled immigration rules. By voting to leave the EU we can take back control of our immigration policies, save our curryhouses and join the rest of the world," she had said.
(Reopens FGN 62)
The Remain campaign within the British Indian political spectrum was led by Alok Sharma, Conservative party MP and Cameron's Infrastructure Envoy to India, with a British Indians for IN group.
He had stressed that voting remain would mean "a seat at the table" for the UK as the EU negotiates some of the biggest trade deals in history - "such as the ongoing discussions with the United States, China and India".
UK Foreign Office minister in charge of India Hugo Swire had argued that "membership of the EU does not prevent us from allowing people in from Commonwealth countries. It is not a binary decision, either EU or Commonwealth".
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