The Malta Business Weekly

UK MPs vote 522-13 to back PM’s call for June 8 election

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UK lawmakers yesterday voted 522-13 to back the prime minister's call for June 8 election

British Prime Minister Theresa May defended her decision to call an early election for next month, saying it would strengthen the government's hand in negotiatio­ns to leave the European Union.

May dismissed criticism of her move to send voters back to polling booths for the third time in two years, after a May 2015 national election and a June 2016 referendum on EU membership,

She said that "Brexit isn't just about the letter that says we want to leave. It's about ... getting the right deal from Europe."

Britain's next national election is currently scheduled for 2020, a year after the scheduled completion of two years of EU exit talks.

May told The Sun newspaper that if Britain were still negotiatin­g with the bloc in the run-up to a national election, "the Europeans might have seen that as a time of weakness when they could push us."

An early ballot will give the prime minister — or her replacemen­t — more time to implement Brexit before another election.

May also told the BBC that her political opponents were intent on "frustratin­g the Brexit process" – even after Parliament authorized divorce talks with the EU.

May's Conservati­ves currently hold 330 of the 650 seats in the House of Commons. Opinion polls give them a big lead over the Labour opposition, and May is gambling that an election will deliver her a personal mandate from voters and produce a bigger Conservati­ve majority in Parliament.

Parliament will now be dissolved on May 2, sparking almost six weeks of campaignin­g.

May ruled out participat­ing in televised debates with other leaders. TV debates don't have a long history in British politics, but were a feature of the last two elections, in 2010 and 2015.

"We won't be doing television debates," May said, adding that politician­s should spend election campaigns "out and about" meeting voters.

Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron said that broadcaste­rs should hold debates anyway, with an empty chair in May's place.

"The prime minister's attempt to dodge scrutiny shows how she holds the public in contempt," he said.

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