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U.K. ministers still support May

- By David Goodman Bloomberg News

Amid reports of a plan to oust the prime minister, cabinet members publicly back her leadership.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond and other cabinet colleagues publicly backed Theresa May on Sunday as several British newspapers said the prime minister is under increasing pressure to stand down over her handling of Brexit.

Speaking on Sky News, Hammond said removing the prime minister won’t help the U.K., and talk of a new leader is “self-indulgent.” Still, in comments that could harden splits in May’s cabinet, the chancellor refused to rule out holding a second referendum to help break the impasse over her Brexit deal, saying it was a “perfectly coherent propositio­n.”

The chancellor spoke after the Sunday Times, Sunday Telegraph, Mail on Sunday and the Observer said cabinet ministers were taking steps to remove May and install an interim leader to complete the Brexit process.

According to the Sunday Times, at least six senior ministers want her deputy, David Lidington, to take the job until there’s a formal leadership election. They’ll confront her at a cabinet meeting Monday, and threaten a mass resignatio­n if she doesn’t step down, the report said. Michael Gove, a leading Brexiteer in the 2016 referendum, and Foreign Minister Jeremy Hunt also have some support.

Lidington said Sunday that he had no interest in taking May’s job, adding that “one thing that working closely with the prime minister does is cure you completely of any lingering shred of ambition to want to do that task.”

Later on Sunday, Gove said he backed May and rejected any plan to change the prime minister.

“This is a time for cool heads,” he said. “It’s not the time to change the captain of the ship, what we need to do is chart the right course.”

May has two weeks to find a way forward after the European Union postponed the U.K.’s March 29 exit date, and hopes to hold a third vote on her Brexit deal in the coming week and give members of Parliament a chance to weigh in on alternativ­es. The prime minister has grown increasing­ly isolated in recent months, both at home and in Brussels, and colleagues were irked by last week’s televised address that blamed the deadlock on the House of Commons.

On Sunday, Hammond reiterated that it was up to lawmakers to come together to find a way forward if they continue to reject May’s deal, and that the government would give them time to do that in coming days. “One way or another Parliament is going to have the opportunit­y this week to decide what it is in favor of,” he said.

When presented with a list of possible options, he ruled out a no-deal exit or revoking Article 50 — which is the formal notificati­on to the EU — but he was less equivocal about the prospect of a second vote.

Another referendum “deserves to be considered” along with other proposals, he said, but added he didn’t think there was majority in Parliament for such an outcome.

Hammond’s comments could enrage anti-EU members of May’s party, who — along with the prime minister — have argued against another vote. The Times reported that key Brexiteers, including Boris Johnson and Jacob Rees-Mogg, have been invited to the prime minister’s Chequers retreat northwest of London on Sunday.

 ?? JESSICA TAYLOR/GETTY=AFP ?? U.K. minister Philip Hammond, right, is backing Prime Minister Theresa May, center.
JESSICA TAYLOR/GETTY=AFP U.K. minister Philip Hammond, right, is backing Prime Minister Theresa May, center.

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