Dead woman walking': UK's Theresa May clings to power
May's co-chiefs of staff, Nick Timothy and Fiona Hill, handed in their resignations on Saturday following the disastrous election, called by May to strengthen her position ahead of talks to leave the European Union, but which in the end left her weakened.
Late Saturday both Downing Street and the DUP issued statements saying talks over a deal to prop up the government would resume next week, amid concern among more liberal Conservatives about May hitching her wagon to the right-wing Northern Irish party. Earlier, Downing Street had said a preliminary agreement had already been secured.
The DUP is similar to the "religious right" in the US and takes a hard-line stance on social issues, such as same-sex marriage and abortion.
Meanwhile the main opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said that he stands ready to lead the country and that a new general election could be held within months.
"I think its quite possible there'll be an election later this year or early next year, and that might be a good thing, because we cannot go on with a period of great instability," he told the BBC's Andrew Marr on Sunday .
Labour's next big push will come during the Queen's Speech on June 19 which will herald the opening of a new parliament in the UK and will contain a new budget as well as the program of government.
"We are going to put down a substantial amendment to the Queen's Speech which will put forward the points in our manifesto," said Corbyn.
This would include an emphasis on jobs in the Brexit talks and a guarantee of the rights of EU nationals to stay in UK. Corbyn also reiterated Labour's commitment to Brexit.
"If we are not EU members there will have to be an arrangement -- we want a tariff-free access to EU market." he said.
Labour will also be pushing for more public spending on social welfare, free university education and higher taxes for the richest one percent.
'Dead woman walking'
Many of those Conservatives now opposing May are those who wanted to remain in the EU.
"Theresa May is a dead woman walking, it just remains to be seen how long she remains on death row," George Osborne, the former UK chancellor who was sacked by May last year, told the BBC's Andrew Marr on Sunday.
MP Anna Soubry, a popular Conservative "Remainer," told the BBC's Andrew Neil that May is "set to go in due course" and that her position is "untenable". Soubry said May's claim that "no deal is better than a bad deal" regarding the EU's Brexit negotiations was one of the reasons her party did not win the election.
The right-wing British press speculated Sunday that Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, a former journalist and the former Mayor of London, was plotting a leadership coup.
But Osborne, who is now the editor of London's Evening Standard newspaper, downplayed the prospect. "He's in a permanent leadership campaign so I am not sure it qualifies as news," he said.
The new arithmetic of the House of Commons will also makes Brexit negotiations more difficult. The DUP, although it wants to leave the EU, will insist on keeping the single market that allows the free flow of goods across the UK's border with Ireland.
Pressure from all sides
May called the vote three years earlier than required by law, with the aim of sweeping an even greater majority for her party before Brexit talks in just eight days to take the country out of the European Union.
But a dismal campaign has left the Prime Minister fending off a mutiny in her own party. Conservative MPs are publicly airing their anger, some calling for her ouster and others demanding radical change in her style of leadership.
Ruth Davidson, the leader of the Conservatives in Scotland, told the BBC she had words with May over the DUP's record on LGBT rights.
"I asked for a categoric assurance that if any deal or scoping deal was done with the DUP there would be absolutely no rescission of LGBTI rights in the rest of the UK, in Great Britain, and that we would use any influence that we had to advance LGBTI rights in Northern Ireland," said the MP, who is a lesbian.
"It's an issue very close to my heart and one that I wanted categoric assurances from the Prime Minister on, and I received [them]."
Pressure is now also coming from the public. A petition on Change.org had more than half a million signatures by Saturday afternoon, calling for May's resignation over her alliance with the DUP.
However, Defense Secretary Michael Fallon said on the Andrew Marr show he believed the Conservative Party and the DUP will be able to hold together in government. "They (the DUP) are going to support us on the big Brexit, economic and security issues facing this country," he said.
May's new chief of staff will be Gavin Barwell, a former MP who was ousted from his south London constituency as a result of Labour's unexpectedly strong showing in the election. May said that he would bring "considerable experience" to the post.




Comments
Post a Comment