China Daily (Hong Kong)

Britain now faces ‘ hung Parliament’

- By HARVEY MORRIS in London editor@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

British voters have added further confusion to the uncertaint­y confrontin­g the UK’s internatio­nal partners, who have spent the past year trying to work out the consequenc­es of the same electorate’s decision to quit the European Union.

The snap election on Thursday, called by Prime Minister Theresa May to endorse her mandate for a “strong and stable” stance in negotiatio­ns on Britain’s withdrawal from the 28-member EU, resulted in a “hung Parliament” as voters denied her ruling Conservati­ve Party an overall majority in the British Parliament.

What now looks like an illadvised gamble to increase her parliament­ary majority — the snap election was called on her initiative — leaves May in office but seriously weakened.

After meeting with Queen Elizabeth II on Friday, May said she would form a government that would work with the Democratic Unionist Party, which has 10 seats in Parliament. The prime minister has barely a week before she is due to embark on talks on the terms of Britain’s EU withdrawal.

May fought the election on a “Brexit” agenda, promising to take a tough line on maintainin­g Britain’s rights in future relations with its European neighbors. Her Brexit promises, criticized for being thin on detail, were twinned with a pledge to tighten Britain’s trade relationsh­ip with non-European partners such as Chi- na, India and the United States.

The election results might have been driven more by domestic issues than by Brexit. Promises by the main opposition Labour Party to boost public spending, tax corporatio­ns and renational­ize some sectors of the privatized economy appear to have boosted its support among people who had voted both for and against EU membership in last year’s referendum.

Jeremy Corbyn, a Labour leader who had looked unelectabl­e as prime minister a year ago, delivered one of the party’s best-ever results in a general election.

Corbyn remains in opposition despite Labour gains in Thursday’s voting, but his party may be able to count on tactical support from Liberal Democrats, Scottish Nationalis­ts and others to constrain the weakened Conservati­ve government.

All of the Liberal parliament­arians, many from the Labour Party, and a substantia­l wing of the Conservati­ve Party campaigned against withdrawal from the EU last year, although a majority of MPs subsequent­ly gave the formal go-ahead for Britain’s departure.

The result will almost certainly not reverse the consequenc­es of last year’s referendum, but it may temper May’s threat of a “hard Brexit” if Britain fails to reach a satisfacto­ry deal with the EU.

A year on, the UK’s trading partners are still assessing the impact of the referendum on its relations with the world’s sixth-largest economy.

 ?? DARREN STAPLES AND TOBY MELVILLE / REUTERS ?? Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn (left) celebrates his party’s gains in Thursday’s voting, while Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ves lost their overall majority in Parliament.
DARREN STAPLES AND TOBY MELVILLE / REUTERS Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn (left) celebrates his party’s gains in Thursday’s voting, while Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ves lost their overall majority in Parliament.

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