Two voices are coming to define the argument over whether Britain should vote to leave the European Union in June: those of Boris Johnson, a contender for prime minister when David Cameron steps down, and of John Major, who already held the job. The comparison flatters Major every time he speaks. The trouble is that Major doesn't speak, or get heard, enough. Meanwhile Johnson, like Donald Trump in the U.S., makes headlines regardless of whether what he says makes sense. No exposure of inaccuracy or inconsistency seems to dent his popularity. And the possibility of a Brexit continues to grow.
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