China Daily

Britain’s May faces up to leadership challenge

- By EARLE GALE in London earle@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Opponents of Britain’s prime minister, Theresa May, mounted a challenge against her leadership of the Conservati­ve Party on Wednesday, a move that culminated in a secret ballot of the party’s members of Parliament later in the evening.

May said ahead of the challenge from within her own party — a so-called vote of no confidence — that the issue was a distractio­n that could end up “delaying or even stopping Brexit” and insisted she would “contest that vote with everything I have got”.

She had been under pressure for months over her handling of negotiatio­ns with the European Union about the United Kingdom’s pending exit from the bloc at the end of March.

She said changing party leader, and therefore prime minister, would “put our country’s future at risk and create uncertaint­y when we can least afford it”.

She has been criticized from all sides, with some Conservati­ve MPs favoring a harder line with the EU, others favoring a softer line, and some hoping to backtrack and remain an EU member.

Wednesday’s challenge was triggered when the influentia­l 1922 Committee that oversees party rules received the requisite 48 letters from Conservati­ve Party MPs calling for a leadership vote.

The party has 315 MPs and May needed the support of at least 158 to hang onto her job.

If she survived Wednesday night’s vote, party rules would prevent the maverick MPs wanting to unseat her from mounting another challenge for at least a year.

The BBC’s political editor, Laura Kuenssberg, said the vote, no matter the outcome, was likely to slow down Brexit deliberati­ons.

Owen Paterson, one of the Conservati­ve MPs who submitted a letter to trigger the leadership challenge, told the BBC: “She is sadly determined to stick to her deal which is not going to get through the House of Commons, and worse, if it did get through the House of Commons, she would lose the support of the DUP, which triggers a general election.”

May has been prime minister since 2016, when she took the reins in the aftermath of the UK’s referendum decision to leave the EU.

If she lost in Wednesday night’s vote, she would not be allowed to stand in the leadership battle that would follow and likely last six weeks.

In the hours before the leadership vote, more than 110 Tory MPs had gone on record saying they would support May in the challenge.

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