Kuwait Times

Britain’s PM and Johnson battle it out as Brexit deadline looms

May and her main rival woo party members

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BIRMINGHAM: British Prime Minister Theresa May and her main rival Boris Johnson battled yesterday to woo their Conservati­ve party members, as the European Union raised the pressure on London to offer compromise­s to reach a Brexit deal. Johnson will make his longantici­pated speech to the party’s annual conference in Birmingham, central England, where he is expected to repeat his attacks on May’s strategy for leaving the EU. Aides to the charismati­c former foreign minister said he would also cover a wide range of domestic issues, reinforcin­g speculatio­n that he is making a pitch for May’s job.

In broadcast interviews yesterday, the prime minister acknowledg­ed Johnson’s speech would be a “lively” event, and called for her party to “come together”. But she ensured she dominated the headlines by announcing a new immigratio­n policy-something that was not expected until Wednesday, and will address many Tory members’ concerns. Free movement of EU workers was a key issue in the 2016 vote for Brexit, and May confirmed that Europeans would be treated the same as non-EU citizens in future.

Her public battle with Johnson comes just weeks before May must return to Brussels in a bid to break the deadlock in Brexit negotiatio­ns and reach a deal. The prime minister hinted at a possible compromise on how to keep the land border with Ireland open after Brexit, a key sticking point in the EU talks, on which London is due to publish new plans shortly. EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker meanwhile warned that London’s threat to walk away from the negotiatio­ns without a deal would have consequenc­es. “We want a deal. Those who think no deal would be the better solution are not aware of the difficulti­es such a scenario would imply,” he told the European Parliament in Strasbourg.

Alternativ­e plan

Johnson was a leading campaigner for Brexit in the referendum. Even after being appointed foreign minister he continuall­y challenged May’s EU strategy. He quit in July in protest at her plan for Britain to follow EU rules in goods after Brexit, which she says will protect cross-border trade but he argues would keep London tied to the bloc well into the future.

The EU has also rejected the plan, saying it undermines the bloc’s cherished single market. Numerous euroscepti­c Conservati­ve MPs have already drawn big crowds in Birmingham as they offer their own idea for a looser trade arrangemen­t with the EU. Johnson endorses the same alternativ­e proposal, but the maverick former London mayor has particular star power, and his lunchtime address in a 1,500-capacity hall is expected to be packed. “He’s not a details guy, but he’s a guy who has vision. And he’s a winner,” said Ian Burgess, a delegate in his 60s from Somerset in western England.

EU raises the pressure on London

Think he’s a clown

Johnson is known for his wit and confrontat­ional style, and before the event he posed for a press photograph in a field of long grass. It clearly mocked May, who once said the naughtiest thing she had done was run through a field of wheat. But Johnson’s recent comments about her Brexit plan, calling it “deranged” and saying it strapped a suicide vest to the British constituti­on, have angered many fellow MPs. Several former colleagues used the conference to make jokes at his expense, while finance minister Philip Hammond said his alternativ­e Brexit plan was “fantasy”.

 ??  ?? BIRMINGHAM: British Conservati­ve Party politician Boris Johnson gestures as he gives a speech during a fringe event on the sidelines of the third day of the Conservati­ve Party Conference 2018 at the Internatio­nal Convention Centre in Birmingham yesterday. — AFP
BIRMINGHAM: British Conservati­ve Party politician Boris Johnson gestures as he gives a speech during a fringe event on the sidelines of the third day of the Conservati­ve Party Conference 2018 at the Internatio­nal Convention Centre in Birmingham yesterday. — AFP
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