Speaking at a press conference at 10 Downing Street, Obama told reporters that Britain's power is amplified by its membership in the 28-nation union, not diminished. He made an almost sentimental appeal to the "special relationship" between the two countries. And he said cast a grim picture of the economic stakes saying flatly the US would not rush to write a free trade deal with a newly independent Great Britain.
Obama spoke on the first day of a three-day visit to London, likely the last of this presidency. The visit comes two months before a June referendum on leaving the union. Polls suggest it will be a close-fought race, with most phone polls indicating a lead for the Remain campaign while some online polls put the Leave camp ahead.
As he landed yesterday night, the president laid out his arguments in an op-ed in a London newspaper, harkening back to the "special relationship" forged by wartime allies President Franklin Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill. With that special status comes with leeway to interfere, Obama argued, writing that he was offering his thoughts with the "candor of a friend."
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