The Borneo Post

Forty UK Conservati­ve lawmakers ready to oust May — British Paper

-

LONDON: Forty British members of parliament from Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservati­ve Party have agreed to sign a letter of noconfiden­ce in her, the Sunday Times newspaper reported.

That is eight short of the number needed to trigger a party leadership contest, the mechanism through which May could be forced from office and replaced by another Conservati­ve.

May has been struggling to maintain her authority over her party since a snap election on June 8 which she called thinking she would win by a wide margin but instead resulted in her losing her parliament­ary majority.

Divided over how to extricate Britain from the European Union and hit by multiple scandals involving ministers, May's government has failed to assert control over a chaotic political situation that is weakening London's hand in Brexit talks.

An earlier attempt to unseat May in the wake of her disastrous speech at the annual party conference fizzled out, but many Conservati­ves remain unhappy with the prime minister's performanc­e and talk of a leadership contest has not gone away.

May has lost two cabinet ministers in as many weeks: Michael Fallon stepped down as defence secretary after becoming implicated in a wider scandal about sexual misconduct in parliament, while Priti Patel resigned as aid minister after she was found to have had secret meetings with top Israeli officials.

In the event of a leadership contest, if a challenger defeated May he or she would take over as Conservati­ve leader and as prime minister.

A national election is not necessary for that to happen.

 ??  ??
 ?? — AFP photo ?? May (left) arrives for the the annual Royal Festival of Remembranc­e at the Royal Albert Hall in London on Armistice Day.
— AFP photo May (left) arrives for the the annual Royal Festival of Remembranc­e at the Royal Albert Hall in London on Armistice Day.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia