Yorkshire Post

Skinner call to reassess HS2 plan

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THERESA MAY has told how she shed a “little tear” when she saw the shock exit poll on election night predicting she was about to lose her majority.

The Prime Minister’s husband Philip broke the news and gave her a hug to console her, she told BBC’s Radio 5 Live’s Emma Barnett.

Mrs May admitted she was “devastated” by the outcome of the June 8 vote and admitted it had come as a “complete shock”.

Mrs May has found her authority diminished since the disastrous General Election she called to get a mandate for Brexit. In an interview to mark her first year in No 10, the PM said she had not watched the exit poll as “I have a little bit of superstiti­on about things like that”.

“We didn’t see the result that came coming,” she said.

“When the result came through, it was a complete shock.

“It took a few minutes for it to sort of sink in, what that was telling me. “My husband gave me a hug.” Mrs May said it was “distressin­g” to see good colleagues losing their seats.

Admitting she knew the campaign “wasn’t going perfectly”, the PM said she had still expected a “better” result.

When asked if she was devastated enough to shed a tear, Mrs May replied: “Yes, a little tear ... at that moment.”

Over the course of an interview in Downing Street Mrs May opened up about the emotional impact of the result, but insisted she had never considered stepping down.

“I felt, I suppose, devastated really because, as I say, I knew the campaign wasn’t going perfectly but, still, the messages I was getting, people I was speaking to, but also the comments we were getting back from a lot of people that were being passed on to me were that we were going to get a better result than we did,” she said.

“You have a responsibi­lity. You are a human being, you have been through that experience, I was there as leader of the party and Prime Minister and I had a responsibi­lity then to, as we went through the night, to determine what we were going to do the next morning.

“No, I didn’t consider stepping down because I felt there was a responsibi­lity there to ensure that the country still had a government.”

Mrs May said there should have been a more positive message during the campaign but she did not regret calling the election because it was “the right thing to do at the time”.

During the 20-minute interview, she added: “It can be easy sometimes if something like this happens just to walk away and leave somebody else to deal with it.” THE GOVERNMENT should reassess plans for the HS2 high-speed rail link to focus on other transport projects, a Labour MP has said.

Bolsover MP Dennis Skinner said Transport Secretary Chris Grayling must “get real” and look again at the plans because MPs are “fed up of the idea of spending money in the far distant future”.

Mr Skinner said: “Why doesn’t the Secretary of State for Transport tell his friends that some of these so-called projects are pie in the sky from the Government that’s already committed to spending more than £80bn on the HS2, in which there’s going to be two tracks through Derbyshire, not one, two – one a slow track and one a fast track.”

Mr Grayling said he was “surprised” Mr Skinner was “talking about opposing a scheme that will deliver capacity improvemen­ts and journey improvemen­ts” in the North.

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 ??  ?? Said she felt responsibi­lity to form a government after the result.
Said she felt responsibi­lity to form a government after the result.

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