The Borneo Post

Theresa May seeks to rally party as Brexit pressures mount

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BIRMINGHAM, United Kingdom: British Prime Minister Theresa May will seek to rally her badly divided party behind her Wednesday key Brexit deadlines loom, but faces intense opposition to her plans for trade and the Irish border.

In her closing speech to the Conservati­ve Party’s annual conference in Birmingham, central England, May will address accusation­s of a lack of confidence in Britain’s future.

“I passionate­ly believe that our best days lie ahead of us and that our future is full of promise,” she will say, according to pre-released extracts of her speech.

But the four- day gathering has exposed the continuing splits in the Conservati­ves over how to approach Brexit, just six months before Britain is due to leave the European Union.

Euroscepti­c MPs led by former foreign minister Boris Johnson have held a string of packed fringe meetings to argue against May’s plan for Britain to follow EU trade rules on goods.

EU leaders have also rejected the overall plan, saying it risks underminin­g its single market, and demanded London come up with revised proposals by an Oct 18 summit.

May argues her so- called Chequers proposal is the only way to protect jobs and cross- border trade while also avoiding physical checks on Britain’s land border with Ireland.

She has, however, promised new proposals on a plan B — a backstop — to keep the frontier open if and until the new trade deal could be agreed with the EU.

Speculatio­n is growing that London may accept some checks on goods passing between Northern Ireland and the rest of Britain, to avoid them on the border with EU member Ireland.

But Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) on Tuesday rejected the idea

I passionate­ly believe that our best days lie ahead of us and that our future is full of promise. Theresa May, British Prime Minister

outright.

After a meeting with May in Birmingham, DUP leader Arlene Foster tweeted: ‘NO border in the Irish Sea will ever be acceptable to unionists throughout the UK ... regulatory or otherwise.’

May’s Conservati­ves depend on the DUP for their majority in the House of Commons, which must approve any final deal.

A rebellion by the DUP, or indeed by even a small number of Conservati­ve MPs, could be enough to kill the deal, potentiall­y causing chaos. May’s hold on power has been fragile since last year’s disastrous snap election when the Conservati­ves lost their Commons majority.

Barely a month has gone by when there is not speculatio­n of a plot against her, much of it focused around Johnson, a leading Brexit campaigner and former mayor of London.

He told a 1,500-strong crowd on Tuesday that May’s trade plan was ‘dangerous’, suggesting it undermined the hopes of Brexit voters.

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 ??  ?? May walks through the conference centre on the third day of the Conservati­ve Party Conference in Birmingham, Britain. — Reuters photo
May walks through the conference centre on the third day of the Conservati­ve Party Conference in Birmingham, Britain. — Reuters photo

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