British Labor leader Jeremy Corbin spoke about Britain's impasse in the midst of its exit from the European Union, the Europeans' disappointment with the EU, and the failure of the youth policy.

• The country is very divided for the time being, not least because of Britain's exit from the EU. If you can stop the exit, do you agree?

- We can not stop the "exit" for the time being because the referendum has already happened, and Article 50 has been activated. What we can do now is to identify the reasons why people vote for the "exit".

Why did most people want to "go out"?

- I think that many of the British people expressed their anger at the backwardness of society, there is a high percentage of votes calling for exit in the most backward areas of the country. In many disadvantaged areas, working conditions have deteriorated over the decades, owing to European legislation.

• Would you face the same problems as Prime Minister Theresa May now if you are responsible for Britain's exit negotiations with the EU?

- No, because I was not connected to the US economy, where a single Conservative faction is trying to deal with it all the time. We want to establish a new and comprehensive customs union with the EU that will protect the Irish border. This is important, and we should also ensure that our supply chains operate in both directions. People voted out or not, but no one voted to lose his job. No one voted to reduce living standards or working conditions.

• Some argue that if the Labor Party has a pro-EU leader, the result of a UK "exit" from the EU would be quite different. How do you think the EU should support it?

- She criticized European competition policy and move to the free market, and in the past criticized the European Union's treatment of Greece, although the euro area is often done in Greece. My idea is that Europe is socialist, with inclusive societies that work for all and not just a few.

Does this mean a European retreat from neo-liberalism?

- Well, as you know, I do not support the neo-liberal economy.

• Given Teresa Mae's near-impossible task of concluding a deal not only with Brussels but also with her party, do you sometimes feel sorry for her?

- I am a respectable man, I feel sorry for anyone in distress, but the best way for anyone in distress is to get himself out of the source of that ordeal.

Why do many young people support you?

- This is not something personal, it is about us as movements that offer some hope. The youth did not appeal to politics, politics is the one that appeals to them and offers them nothing. I grew up in the fifties and sixties of the last century, and I always thought that I had a better life than my father. My parents are not poor. The turning point for me was the policy endorsed by the late US president Ronald Reagan and the late British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Their message was that young people had to pay for education, health and pensions, and that society did not really care about them.

• Now you want to go to the future?

- What we are saying on both sides of the Atlantic is the redistribution of wealth and power. US Senator Bernie Sanders has a clear line: "America can accept anything except inequality."

• You will reach 70 years next year. Are you planning to run for the next general election?

- I am very small, because I enjoy good health, I run, I am a vegetarian, I eat cereals every morning, I do not smoke and I do not drink alcohol, I do not do anything bad.

Corbin spoke of the impasse facing Britain in the midst of its exit from the European Union, and the disappointment of Europeans in the Union.