The Philippine Star

UK PM faces ouster

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LONDON (AP) — British politics was thrown into chaos and Brexit into doubt yesterday as Conservati­ve lawmakers triggered a no-confidence vote in Prime Minister Theresa May that will see her removed as party and government leader if she loses.

May vowed to fight the challenge “with everything I’ve got,” after Graham Brady, who heads a committee overseeing Conservati­ve leadership contests, said he had received letters from at least 48 lawmakers asking for a vote.

As a result, he said, “the threshold of 15 percent of the parliament­ary party seeking a vote of confidence in the leader of the Conservati­ve Party has been exceeded.”

Brady said the vote would be held in Parliament between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. yesterday evening, with the results announced soon after.

The announceme­nt throws the United Kingdom’s already rocky path out of the European Union, which it is due to leave in March, into further chaos.

Many Tory lawmakers have been growing angry with May over her handling of Brexit, and the challenge comes days after she postponed a vote to approve a divorce deal with the EU to avoid all-butcertain defeat.

If she loses the confidence vote, May must step down and there will be a contest to choose a new leader. She will remain leader, and prime minister, until the successor is picked. If she wins, she cannot be challenged again for a year.

“A change of leadership in the Conservati­ve Party now will put our country’s future at risk,” May said in a defiant statement outside 10 Downing Street.

She added that ousting her and holding a leadership vote – a process that could take weeks – could result in Brexit being delayed or even stopped.

May canceled a trip to Dublin to meet Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, to stay in London and battle for lawmakers’ support.

Many supporters of Brexit said May’s deal fails to deliver on the clean break with the bloc that they want.

Former environmen­t secretary Owen Paterson accused May of acting like a “supplicant” in dealings with the EU.

“She’s not the person to see Brexit through,” he said.

In a joint statement, leading pro-Brexit legislator­s Jacob Rees-Mogg and Steve Baker said that “in the national interest, she must go.”

Cabinet colleagues, however, rallied to May’s support.

Home Secretary Sajid Javid tweeted that a leadership contest, with Brexit a little more than three months away, “will be seen as self-indulgent and wrong. PM has my full support and is best person to ensure we leave EU on 29 March.”

“I think it’s vital for the country that she wins tonight,” Justice Secretary David Gauke said, adding that if May loses, “I don’t think we will be leaving the European Union on the 29th of March.”

 ??  ?? British Prime Minister Theresa May addresses the media outside 10 Downing Street after it was announced that the Conservati­ve Party would hold a vote of no confidence in her leadership in London yesterday. REUTERS
British Prime Minister Theresa May addresses the media outside 10 Downing Street after it was announced that the Conservati­ve Party would hold a vote of no confidence in her leadership in London yesterday. REUTERS

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