Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

U.K. Conservati­ve Party divided before meeting

Arguments over Brexit threaten May’s security

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON — Britain’s governing Conservati­ve Party is at war — with itself.

The divide is over Europe, and only thing the two feuding factions agree on is that their leader, Prime Minister Theresa May, is heading in the wrong direction.

So May will be under attack from all sides when the Conservati­ves open their annual conference Sunday in the central England city of Birmingham.

Party conference­s are usually a chance for leaders to rally their troops and for parties to unveil new voter-friendly policies. May’s goal at this fourday gathering, how- ever, will be surviving atop a fractious and febrile party that is convulsed over Brexit.

“It’s simply a case of hoping she emerges from Birmingham without things getting even worse than they are,” said Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London.

May became British prime minister in 2016 because of the Brexit vote in which the country decided to leave the European Union. Her predecesso­r, David Cameron, resigned when voters rejected his advice and opted to quit the EU after more than four decades of membership. May’s entire premiershi­p has been devoted to making Britain’s departure happen.

But with exit day, March 29, exactly six months away, the terms of the divorce and of the U.K.’s future relationsh­ip with the EU still remain unclear.

May’s Brexit plan proposes that Britain stick close to EU rules in return for remaining in the bloc’s single market for goods. EU leaders have rejected that idea, saying the U.K. is trying to cherry-pick benefits of being in the 28-nation bloc without assuming the costs and responsibi­lities.

The stalemate has emboldened pro-Brexit Conservati­ves, who say May should ditch her Chequers plan — named for the British leader’s country retreat where it was hammered out — and seek a looser trade agreement that leaves the U.K. free to strike new deals around the world.

Flamboyant former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who quit the government in July, on Friday called May’s plan “a moral and intellectu­al humiliatio­n” for Britain.

In a 4,500-word Daily Telegraph article that was as much a Conservati­ve leadership manifesto as a Brexit plan, Johnson said Britain should stop trying to be “half-in, half-out” of the bloc. He argued that the country would be “more dynamic and more successful” once freed from EU control.

Johnson plans to pile pressure on May at a conference rally Tuesday — one of several meetings by Brexit enthusiast­s designed to force the prime minister to “chuck Chequers.”

On May’s other flank are pro-EU Conservati­ves who want to stay closely bound to the bloc, Britain’s biggest trading partner. They want May to keep the U.K. inside the EU’s single market for goods and services. Some also seek a new referendum that changes the terms of Brexit or even reverses Britain’s decision to leave.

Simon Allison, chairman of Conservati­ves for a People’s Vote, a group calling for a new referendum on Brexit, said that “there are at least as many Tory voters — maybe more — who support our position as support the hard-line (pro-Brexit) position.”

Meanwhile, May is digging in. After the EU rejected her Chequers plan last week at a summit in the Austrian city of Salzburg, she blamed the bloc for the negotiatin­g “impasse” and insisted that “no deal is better than a bad deal.”

 ??  ?? Boris Johnson
Boris Johnson
 ??  ?? Theresa May
Theresa May

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