The Phnom Penh Post

PM May delivers ‘shambolic’ speech

- Alice Ritchie

PRIME Minister Theresa May urged her party on Wednesday to back her to deliver bold change for Britain, but her attempt to move past Brexit splits was marred by a protest, a collapsing set and a coughing fit.

The Conservati­ve leader used her closing speech to the party’s annual conference to call for national unity after the divisive EU vote, and promise reforms including a major new programme of housebuild­ing.

But May’s address was stopped mid-way when a prankster handed her a P45 – a form given to those leaving a job – claiming he had been sent by rebellious Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson.

No sooner had she resumed, May was overtaken by a prolonged coughing fit thatcontin­ued on and off throughout the rest of the speech.

To make matters worse, the slogan on the wall behind her – “building a country that works for everyone” – began to collapse, with two letters falling off. It was a farcical end to a four-day conference in the northweste­rn city of Manchester that has been marked by a subdued mood, a lack of big policies and lukewarm support for May herself.

“It just couldn’t get worse than this. What a disaster. It’s a shambles, not a government,” tweeted Seema Malhotra, a lawmaker with the opposition Labour party.

But May’s distress appeared to rouse the delegates, who gave her repeated standing ovations.

“Obviously she was having difficulti­es, but what we saw was her tenacity,” Stephen Kerr, a Scottish member of parliament, said.

“She’s been through so much in the past few months, but she carries on and that’s why we’re behind the prime minister.”

This year’s conference has been overshadow­ed by Johnson’s decision to set out his rival vision for Brexit in a newspaper article last month. The move by a politician known for his leadership ambitions was viewed as an attempt to goad the prime minister, and many saw her failure to sack him as a proof of her weakness.

Four months after the June election, which was called by May but which saw her lose her parliament­ary majority, she began Wednesday’s speech with an apology.

“I hold my hands up for that. I take responsibi­lity,” she said. “And I am sorry.”

But she warned her ministers, who sat in front of her, that it was time to “shape up and give the country the government it needs”.

“Working people up and down this land . . . must be our only focus,” she said.

May announced a £2 billion ($2.65 billion) investment in housing, promising to dedicate her premiershi­p to tackling the shortage of affordable homes. She also promised to fulfil a manifesto pledge to put a price cap on energy bills.

 ?? PAUL ELLIS AND OLI SCARFF/AFP ?? British Prime Minister Theresa May’s speech was blighted by a coughing fit, falling letters and a protester.
PAUL ELLIS AND OLI SCARFF/AFP British Prime Minister Theresa May’s speech was blighted by a coughing fit, falling letters and a protester.

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