Times Colonist

Britain votes today in wake of terror attacks

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — After a seven-week election campaign that veered from the boredom of staged soundbites to the trauma of two deadly attacks, Britain’s political leaders asked voters Wednesday to choose: Who is best to keep the U.K. safe and lead it out of the European Union?

Conservati­ve Prime Minister Theresa May and opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn crisscross­ed the country on the final day of campaignin­g, trying to woo voters with rival plans for Brexit, building a fairer society and combating a terrorist threat made all too immediate by attacks in Manchester and London.

May promised to crack down on extremism if she wins today’s vote — even if that means watering down human-rights legislatio­n. “We are seeing the terrorist threat changing, we are seeing it evolve and we need to respond to that,” May said.

Corbyn argued that the real danger comes from Conservati­ve cuts to police budgets. “We won’t defeat terrorists by ripping up our basic rights and our democracy,” he said.

Polls are open today from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. local time, with all 650 seats in the House of Commons up for grabs. A party needs to win 326 seats to form a majority government.

May called the snap election — three years early — in a bid to boost the Conservati­ve majority in Parliament, which she says will strengthen Britain’s hand in divorce talks with the European Union.

“Get those negotiatio­ns wrong and the consequenc­es will be dire,” she warned. Brexit negotiatio­ns will take up much of the incoming government’s time over the next two years.

But it has taken a back seat in the election — initially to debates about how to narrow the gap between rich and poor, then by the attacks in Manchester and London.

Regarding the former, a Conservati­ve victory would mean continued cuts to public spending in a bid to reduce the nation’s deficit; Labour says it will pump millions more into education and health care and raise income tax on the highest earners.

Corbyn said Thursday’s vote offered a clear choice between “another five years of a Tory government, underfundi­ng of services all across the U.K . ... or a Labour government that invests for all, all across Britain.”

The deadly attacks in Manchester on May 22 and London on Saturday twice brought the campaign to a temporary halt — and put the threat from internatio­nal terrorism front and centre.

As May vowed to bring in new antiterror measures, Corbyn criticized cuts to the police under the Conservati­ves, which saw the number of officers plummet by almost 20,000 between 2010 and 2016.

May responded by assailing Corbyn’s security record. He opposed British military interventi­ons in Afghanista­n, Iraq and Libya, wants to scrap Britain’s nuclear arsenal and shared platforms with Irish republican­s in the years when the IRA was setting off bombs in Britain.

Labour has had a better campaign than many expected, with opinion polls showing a narrowing of the gap between it and the Conservati­ves.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Theresa May speaks at a rally in Slough, England, as campaignin­g concluded ahead of today’s U.K. general election.
Prime Minister Theresa May speaks at a rally in Slough, England, as campaignin­g concluded ahead of today’s U.K. general election.

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