Stabroek News Sunday

UK’s May seals deal to prop up government, but loses key aides

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LONDON/BELFAST (Reuters) British Prime Minister Theresa May secured a deal yesterday to prop up her minority government but looked increasing­ly isolated after a botched election gamble plunged Britain into crisis days before the start of talks on leaving the European Union.

Her Conservati­ves struck an outline deal with Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) for support on key legislatio­n. It was a humiliatin­g outcome after an election that May had intended to strengthen her ahead of the Brexit push.

Instead, voters stripped the Conservati­ves of their parliament­ary majority. As May struggled to contain the fallout, her two closest aides resigned.

Newspapers said foreign minister Boris Johnson and other leading party members were weighing leadership challenges. But Johnson said he backed May.

May called the early election in April, when opinion polls suggested she was set for a sweeping win.

May’s aides, Nick Timothy and Fiona Hill quit yesterday following sustained criticism within the party of the campaign.

Gavin Barwell was named new chief of staff. The Conservati­ve lawmaker who lost his seat on Thursday and has experience working as a party enforcer in parliament.

The change was unlikely to significan­tly quell unrest within the party. Most of May’s cabinet members have kept quiet on the issue of her future, adding to speculatio­n that her days as prime minister are numbered.

A YouGov poll for the Sunday Times newspaper found 48 percent of people felt May should quit while 38 percent thought she should stay.

The DUP, whose 10 seats in the new parliament give May just enough support to pass legislatio­n, agreed in principle to a “confidence and supply” arrangemen­t, Downing Street said. That means it will support a Conservati­ve minority government on key votes in parliament without a formal coalition deal.

A source close to the DUP said the party was seeking more funding for the province and concession­s for former British soldiers in exchange for supporting May.

Still the deal with the DUP risks upsetting the political balance in Northern Ireland. It aligns London more closely with the pro-British side in the divided province, where a power-sharing government with Irish nationalis­ts is suspended.

The Observer newspaper said the DUP arrangemen­t fell short of a full coalition agreement because of concerns among some Conservati­ve lawmakers about the socially conservati­ve DUP’s positions on gay rights, abortion and climate change.

The turmoil engulfing May has increased the chance that Britain will fall out of the EU in 2019 without a deal. Previously, she said she wanted to take Britain out of the EU’s single market and customs union in order to cut immigratio­n.

Her party is deeply divided over what it wants from Brexit. The election result means businesses still have no idea what trading rules they can expect in the coming years.

EU Budget Commission­er Guenther Oettinger said it may now be possible to discuss closer ties between Britain and the EU than May had initially planned, given her election flop. “For instance, if London were to stay in the customs union, then it would not have to renegotiat­e all trade agreements,” he told the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Sonntagsze­itung newspaper.

The pound on Friday fell 1.7 percent against the US dollar and 1.4 percent against the euro.

After confirming on Friday that her top five ministers, including finance minister Philip Hammond, would keep their jobs, May must name the rest of her team, who will take on one of the most demanding jobs in recent British political history.

May has said Brexit talks will begin on June 19 as scheduled, the same day as the formal reopening of parliament. She confirmed this to German leader Angela Merkel in a phone call yesterday.

She also reiterated that she would seek a reciprocal agreement early in the talks on rights of EU and British citizens, Downing Street said.

Elmar Brok, a German conservati­ve and the European Parliament’s top Brexit expert, told the Ruhr Nachrichte­n newspaper that the twoyear talks would now be more complicate­d. “May won’t be able to make any compromise­s because she lacks a broad parliament­ary majority,” he said.

Britain’s largely pro-Conservati­ve press questioned whether May could remain in power.

The Sun newspaper said senior members of the party had vowed to get rid of May, but would wait at least six months because they feared a leadership contest could propel the Labour party into power under Jeremy Corbyn, who supports renational­isation of key industries and higher taxes for business and top earners.

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Theresa May

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