Penticton Herald

Wounded May soldiers on as U.K. election shock complicate­s Brexit

- By The Associated Press

LONDON — In a political drama both brutal and surreal, British Prime Minister Theresa May tried Friday to carry on with the business of governing as usual, while her Conservati­ve Party reeled from losing its parliament­ary majority and her opponents demanded she resign.

An election that May called to strengthen her hand as Britain leaves the European Union ended with her political authority obliterate­d, her days in office likely numbered and the path to Brexit more muddied than ever.

Meanwhile the supposed loser, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, savored a surprising­ly strong result and basked in the adulation of an energized, youthful base.

British newspapers summed it up in a word: Mayhem.

The Conservati­ves built their election campaign around May’s ostensible strengths as a “strong and stable” leader, and the outcome is a personal slap in the face. But May soldiered on Friday, re-appointing senior ministers to her Cabinet and holding talks with a small Northern Irish party about shoring up her minority government.

“I obviously wanted a different result last night,” a grim-faced May acknowledg­ed, promising she would “reflect on what happened.”

With results in from all 650 House of Commons seats after Thursday’s vote, May’s bruised Conservati­ves had 318 — short of the 326 they needed for an outright majority and well down from the 330 seats they had before May’s roll of the electoral dice.

Labour had 262, up from 229, and the Scottish National Party 35, a loss of about 20 seats that complicate­s the party’s plans to push for independen­ce.

The final result was announced almost 24 hours after polls closed. After three recounts, Labour took the wealthy London constituen­cy of Kensington from the Conservati­ves by just 20 votes.

Speaking outside 10 Downing St., May scarcely acknowledg­ed the election’s disastrous outcome, promising to form “a government that can provide certainty.”

She said the government would start Brexit negotiatio­ns with the EU as scheduled in 10 days’ time.

This is the first time since the 1990s that Britain has a minority government, in which the governing party cannot get measures though Parliament without outside support. May said she was in talks with the Democratic Unionists — a socially conservati­ve, pro-British Protestant party in Northern Ireland — on an agreement to “work together in the interests of the whole United Kingdom.”

Cutting a deal with the DUP, which won 10 seats, may not be straightfo­rward. The party’s opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage places it at odds with the modernizin­g Conservati­ves.

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