Business Standard

MAY SEEKS DEAL WITH NORTHERN IRISH PARTY FOR POWER

- KYLIE MACLELLAN & ESTELLE SHIRBON

British Prime Minister Theresa May was seeking a deal with a small Northern Irish party on Sunday to stay in power after losing her party’s parliament­ary majority in a catastroph­ic electoral gamble just days before Brexit talks are set to start.

But with May’s personal authority in tatters, there were reports that moves were afoot within her Conservati­ve Party to dislodge her, while opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was insisting she could be ousted and he could replace her.

May’s Downing Street office said on Sunday she had spoken with Northern Ireland’s pro-Brexit, socially conservati­ve Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) to discuss finalising a deal when parliament returns on Tuesday.

“We will welcome any such deal being agreed, as it will provide the stability and certainty the whole country requires as we embark on Brexit and beyond,” Downing Street said in a statement.

“As and when details are finalised both parties will put them forward,” it said.

The timing is challengin­g, with Britain due to start negotiatin­g the terms of its exit from the European Union with the bloc’s 27 other members on June 19.

The Conservati­ves won 318 House of Commons seats in Thursday’s election, eight short of an outright majority. Labour, the main opposition party, won 262. The DUP won 10.

Labour’s Corbyn told the Sunday Mirror newspaper he saw a route to power himself, although it was not clear how he would command the support of a majority of members of parliament.

Labour’s tally, even when added to those of potential allies such as the Scottish National Party and other smaller parties, was still short of a majority.

“I can still be prime minister. This is still on. Absolutely,” Corbyn was quoted as saying.

He said his party would seek to vote down May’s Queen’s Speech, or programme for government, when she presented it to parliament. If that succeeded, May would be expected to stand aside and let Corbyn try to win the backing of a majority of members of parliament to form a government.

May had called the snap election with a view to increasing the narrow majority she had inherited from her predecesso­r David Cameron.

At the start of the campaign, she was enjoying poll leads of 20 points or more over the main opposition Labour Party.

But after a poor campaign and an unexpected­ly stiff challenge from Labour, her plan went disastrous­ly wrong, leaving her unable to form a sustainabl­e government without DUP support.

“I don’t think Theresa May and this government have any credibilit­y. The prime minister called this election on the basis she would need a stronger mandate to negotiate Brexit. Well, look what’s happened,” Corbyn told the Sunday Mirror.

The Conservati­ves now plan to reach a so-called confidence and supply agreement with the DUP, which would involve it supporting a Conservati­ve minority government on key votes in parliament but not forming a formal coalition.

After an initial round of discussion­s, Downing Street had said on Saturday that the “principles of an outline agreement” had been agreed with the DUP.

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 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May with husband Phillip arrive at a church in Sonning, Britain, on Sunday
PHOTO: REUTERS Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May with husband Phillip arrive at a church in Sonning, Britain, on Sunday

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