The Borneo Post

‘Zombie government’ braces for UK parliament test

-

LONDON: Prime Minister Theresa May presents her programme to parliament yesterday with a focus on Brexit and terrorism, despite suffering an election fiasco that British media said has turned her government into a ‘zombie’.

The formal State Opening of Parliament by Queen Elizabeth II comes after a string of tragedies which have shaken the nation, and an election on June 8 in which May lost her parliament­ary authority.

The queen will read out the watered- down list of proposed legislatio­n and lawmakers will then spend the next few days debating before bringing it to a vote.

May could be forced to resign if she loses the vote, just as the country embarks on highly sensitive negotiatio­ns for Britain’s withdrawal from the EU.

After four terror attacks and a devastatin­g fire that have darkened the national mood, protesters are also planning a ‘ Day of Rage’ in the streets against May’s Conservati­ves that will converge outside parliament.

The Times branded her administra­tion the “stumbling husk of a zombie government” and said May was now “so weak that she cannot arbitrate between squabbling cabinet ministers”, who are increasing­ly publicly divided over Brexit.

“Downing Street is a vacuum,” the newspaper said.

John McDonnell, chief finance spokesman for the main opposition Labour Party, said May’s minority government had ‘ no right to govern’.

“They haven’t got an overall

They haven’t got an overall majority. So, yes, they have got the right to bring forward their own programme, but I don’t believe, actually, that they are legitimate.

majority. So, yes, they have got the right to bring forward their own programme, but I don’t believe, actually, that they are legitimate,” McDonnell told BBC radio.

May called the June 8 snap general election in a bid to strengthen her mandate heading into the Brexit talks.

But the plan spectacula­rly backfired, leaving her with a minority government that is now trying to form a majority with Northern Ireland’s ultraconse­rvative Democratic Unionist Party.

May has resisted calls to resign and is hoping for the support of the DUP’s 10 MPs to boost her tally of 317 seats in the 650seat parliament, but a deal has proved elusive so far.

A DUP source said a deal was “certainly not imminent” as the talks “haven’t proceeded in a way that the DUP would have expected” and cautioned that the party “can’t be taken for granted”.

But even with DUP backing, the government would command only a tiny majority, and just a few rebel MPs could be enough to undermine it fatally.

The Queen’s Speech, normally a chance for a new government to show off an ambitious programme, will reportedly be very pared down this time in order to avoid any potential splits in Conservati­ve ranks.

The event is usually a high point of British pomp and pageantry, but this year there will be no horse- drawn carriage procession, crown or ceremonial robes. — AFP

John McDonnell, chief finance spokesman for the main opposition Labour Party

 ??  ?? Gathered public look on as guardsmen parade in front of Buckingham Palace in London before the Queen opens Parliament during the State Opening ceremony. — AFP photo
Gathered public look on as guardsmen parade in front of Buckingham Palace in London before the Queen opens Parliament during the State Opening ceremony. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia