The Borneo Post

May will face leadership challenge if she softens Brexit – Telegraph

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May will face an immediate leadership challenge from euroscepti­c lawmakers in her party if she seeks to water down her plans for Brexit, the Sunday Telegraph reported, citing senior Conservati­ve sources.

May, who won the top job in the wake of last year’s vote to leave the European Union, had in January set out her plans for Brexit, saying Britain would leave the single market so it could control immigratio­n.

But May’s failure to win a majority in last week’s election has weakened her position badly and reopened the debate around the Brexit strategy just days before the country opens its divorce talks with Brussels today. Prompted by her poor election showing, particular­ly among pro-EU young people who fear losses of jobs and opp or t u ni t y from Brexit, some of her most senior ministers and two former Conservati­ve prime ministers have called for a rethink.

“If we had a strong signal that she were backslidin­g I think she would be in major difficulty,” the newspaper quoted one unidentifi­ed former minister as saying.

“The point is she is not a unifying figure any more. She has really hacked off the parliament­ary party for obvious reasons. So I’m afraid to say there is no goodwill towards her.”

The newspaper quoted another former minister as saying: “If she weakened on Brexit, the world would fall in... all hell would break loose.”

May called the election in a bid to increase her majority and strengthen her hand within her party ahead of the Brexit talks.

But the unexpected weak performanc­e has plunged Britain into a political crisis and left May battling to unite both wings of the Conservati­ve Party — those who want a so- called ‘hard Brexit’ and those who did not want to leave the EU in the first place.

The Sunday Times said ministers within May’s cabinet had ‘ let it be known’ they would oust the prime minister if they thought she could not pass the government’s legislativ­e programme in a vote expected on June 28.

The Times also reported that party members who had campaigned to keep Britain in the EU were likely to have a candidate lined up to replace May, with interior minister Amber Rudd the likely option.

Having lost a majority in parliament, May is in talks with Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party to secure the support of its 10 lawmakers to win any kind of vote, including on the pieces of legislatio­n needed to enact Britain’s divorce from the EU. — Reuters

 ??  ?? May leaves after a church service in Sonning, Britain. — Reuters photo
May leaves after a church service in Sonning, Britain. — Reuters photo

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