Cornwall Council has renewed its call for the government to provide £700m in funding to fill the gap left by EU funding post-Brexit.
The figure would cover the loss the region will suffer over the next ten years due to the impact of leaving the European Union.
Cornwall was granted Objective One status by the EU in 1999, meaning it was eligible for funding as one of the poorest regions in Europe.
As a result, it received £350m between 2000 and 2006, and an additional £415m from 2007 to 2013.
The money was used to fund projects intended to increase tourism to the area, including the Eden Project, a tourist destination which boosted the economy by £1.7bn, according to Corwall Live. It also covered the cost of a new airport terminal and other facilities, a local university, superfast broadband and a business start-up fund, among other things.
Council chief executive Kate Kennally said that she was calling on Boris Johnson to fulfil his promise that Corwall wouldn't be negatively impacted by Brexit.
She said:
The amount is the same as what Cornwall Council has been calling for in terms of the equivalent of what Cornwall would have received from the EU and as the level of funds to catch up with other parts of the country as part of the levelling up agenda.
We are calling for it as a single pot to prevent us having to continually bid for separate pots. We want to have the funding in a single pot that will be managed by organisations here in Cornwall.
But not everyone was impressed.
Many pointed out that Cornwall actually voted for Brexit, with 56.5 per cent of voters backing Leave in the 2016 referendum.
There was a fair bit of smug schadenfreude from Remainers.
Oh crumbs 🤭 Remind me again on how Cornwall voted in that criminal Referendum, despite being funded by EU rather t… https://t.co/adjC5xvjRw— KnittingCat 🕷#FBPE🇪🇺🇫🇷🧶🐟❄️💙3.5% (@KnittingCat 🕷#FBPE🇪🇺🇫🇷🧶🐟❄️💙3.5%) 1595069252
@Life_Disrupted The leave voting EU hating Cornwall you mean finally realising what was obvious to anyone with brai… https://t.co/ymlMtW6Ys8— What do Experts Know? 🇬🇧🏳️🌈🇪🇺 (@What do Experts Know? 🇬🇧🏳️🌈🇪🇺) 1595061869
However, others made the point that the reality of the situation isn't funny, and those seeing it as some sort of comeuppance were missing the point.
Nearly 50% of kids in the most deprived wards of Cornwall grow up in poverty. Cornwall has the tenth-highest number… https://t.co/2AUgA5J7G3— Harry Samuels (@Harry Samuels) 1595075191
After all, 43.5 per cent of Cornwall's voters backed Remain – and they will be hit just as hard.
And not everyone knew what they were voting for.
@Life_Disrupted Tbf the Leave argument all along was that EU money was ‘our’ money coming back to us and we would b… https://t.co/gopvkEzhDP— Sharon Hawthorne (@Sharon Hawthorne) 1595059690