The Asian Age

EU deal may cost Hammond his post

British FM wants Brexit deal that allows firms to keep hiring migrant workers

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London, June 2: British finance minister Philip Hammond may be replaced by interior minister Amber Rudd if Prime Minister Theresa May wins a landslide victory in next week’s national election, The Telegraph reported on Friday as a new opinion poll showed that the Conservati­ve Party’s lead over the opposition Labour has shrunk to five points from 15 just over two weeks ago.

Doubts about Mr Hammond’s future have mounted since he had to reverse plans to raise payroll taxes for self-employed workers just days after presenting his first annual Budget in March while Rudd has played a highly visible role in the election.

The Telegraph cited senior government sources as saying that Ms Rudd, a former investment banker and venture capitalist, had the qualities needed to run Britain’s finance ministry and that they could “see it happening”.

“If the Prime Minister has a very big majority, she will be able to do what she likes — the bigger the majority, the bigger the reshuffle,” one unnamed minister said.

A spokesman for Ms May’s party said the report was “complete speculatio­n — rather irrelevant speculatio­n before an election”.

Mr Hammond has annoyed many Conservati­ves who favour a clean break with the EU by stressing the need for a Brexit deal that allows firms to keep hiring the migrant workers they need.

The opinion poll, from Ipsos MORI, is the latest to show a narrowing lead for May. With less than a week to go before the national election, the poll showed the Conservati­ves’ share of the vote had fallen to 45 per cent, down four percentage points since the previous poll published on May 18. A YouGov opinion poll on Wednesday showed the Conservati­ves’ lead had fallen to a fresh low of three points.

 ?? — AFP ?? Former Liberal Democrat Cabinet minister Ed Davey demonstrat­es with campaigner­s against British Prime Minister Theresa May’s social care policy, or ‘Dementia Tax’, in London on Friday.
— AFP Former Liberal Democrat Cabinet minister Ed Davey demonstrat­es with campaigner­s against British Prime Minister Theresa May’s social care policy, or ‘Dementia Tax’, in London on Friday.

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