Jo Cox: Husband Brendan 'awed' by numbers attending Great Get Together events across UK

'We didn't think it would have anything like the scale and the traction that it's had. We've been awed by it,' Brendan Cox says

Dave Higgens
Saturday 17 June 2017 21:07 BST
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Brendan Cox and Kim Leadbeater, husband and sister of murdered MP Jo Cox, attend a Great Get Together event marking the anniversary of Ms Cox’s death, at Yorkshire
Brendan Cox and Kim Leadbeater, husband and sister of murdered MP Jo Cox, attend a Great Get Together event marking the anniversary of Ms Cox’s death, at Yorkshire (PA)

Jo Cox's widower said he was “awed” by how the UK came together to celebrate community on the anniversary of the MP’s murder.

Tens of thousands of events were organised around the country as part of The Great Get Together, and Brendan Cox enjoyed the sunshine at one in Heckmondwike, in West Yorkshire.

Accompanied by Ms Cox’s parents, Gordon and Jean Leadbeater, and her sister, Kim Leadbeater, he joined hundreds of people in the green at the centre of the town, which is at the heart of her Batley & Spen constituency.

He said: “When we first thought about this we were thinking of just bringing some people together. We didn't think it would have anything like the scale and the traction that it's had. We've been awed by it.

“I think we've had well over 100,000 events with millions of people taking part in the weekend.

“And we got the weather for it, which is a good thing to be able to say.”

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Mr Cox and his wife's family were greeted warmly by visitors to the event, which included a range of traditional entertainment from a bouncy castle to stalls, as well as live music.

He said: “Of course it's partly about Jo but, actually, I think it's tapping into something more important even than that which is a sense that our communities want to come together again.

“Politics at the moment is so divisive.

“We spend so much time talking about the areas we disagree with each other on, actually finding a moment like this when we just get together with our neighbours and have a good time in parks like this and streets up and down the country, I think is exactly what we need.”

Mr Cox said: “What Jo's killing was designed to do was to tear our communities apart.

“I can think of no better response to that than a moment like this that brings our communities together — people from different background, who come from all different places around here, different faiths. Just moments that don't fixate on the differences but focus on those things that we have in common.

“I think as a country we are not good enough at doing that.”

He added: “If people feel closer to their communities, that's exactly how Jo would want to be remembered.”

Mr Cox said he spent Friday with his family, focusing on his wife, who was murdered on 16 June last year outside the library in Birstall, just a couple of miles to the east.

He said: “She would have loved this thing. It was absolutely at the heart of who she was. She would have been here bouncing on the bouncy castle with the kids.

“And to have moments that enable us to celebrate that and to remember that. For us, as a family, that's the best thing we can have.”

PA

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