Kuwait Times

May faces party faithful after a bruising week

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British Prime Minister Theresa May will seek to rally her party faithful yesterday after a week in which her political honeymoon abruptly ended, laying bare her weaknesses over Brexit. The Scottish government’s call for a second independen­ce vote has left May fighting on two fronts as she prepares to start the process of leaving the European Union later this month. She was also forced to drop a planned tax rise after pressure from backbench MPs, revealing how she could become a hostage to factions in her Conservati­ve Party as the complex Brexit negotiatio­ns progress.

At a party conference in Cardiff she will seek to regain the initiative, setting out plans to deliver “a brighter future” after exiting the EU. May’s centre-right Conservati­ves are ahead by as much as 19 points in some polls, but much of the lead is because of a weak Labour opposition. And her majority in the House of Commons is slim. “Theresa May’s position as prime minister is far weaker than the opinion polls suggest,” said Tony Travers, a politics professor at the London School of Economics.

In a message released on a new website entitled “Plan for Britain”, May said last June’s referendum vote to leave the EU was “an instructio­n to change the way our whole country works”. “I want the UK to emerge from this period of national change, stronger, fairer, more united and more outward-looking than ever before,” she said. — AFP

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