The Phnom Penh Post

British prime minister sets out plan for power

- Alice Ritchie

BRITISH Prime Minister Boris Johnson will set out his plans for the government on Thursday following a sweeping election win, focused on delivering Brexit and supporting the health service.

Queen Elizabeth I I will open parliament in a lavish ceremony where she will read out the Conservati­ve leader’s legislativ­e programme for the months ahead.

But in a sign of a looming constituti­onal battle, Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon was to stake her claim for a new vote on independen­ce, just before the monarch’s address.

Top of Johnson’s to-do list wi l l be a bi l l to rat i f y t he terms of Brita in’s ex it f rom the EU, which he negotiated in October but could not get through parliament.

Equipped with a majority of 80 in the 650-seat House of Commons, he hopes to push through the deal in time to “Get Brexit Done” on the next EU deadline of January 31.

He has also vowed to address concerns about public services, particular­ly among the many working-class voters who backed the Tories for the first time in this election.

T here w i l l be a bi l l to ensh r i ne i n l aw spend i ng i ncreases for t he state-r un Nat iona l Hea lt h S er v ic e, which has faced cuts during a decade of Conser v at ive austerit y measures.

The Queen’s Speech normally takes place about once a year but there was one in October, following Johnson’s election as Conservati­ve leader in July.

Rebellions over Brexit left him without the support in the Commons he needed to govern, so he called a snap election – and won a landslide.

As a result, Thursday’s speech will be scaled down, with the 93-year-old monarch eschewing her horse-drawn carriage for a car and her crown for a hat.

But it will still be rich in pageantry.

The highlight will be the Withdrawal Agreement Bill ( WAB) to ratify the terms of Brexit, which will be put to a first vote among members of Parliament on Friday.

It covers Britain’s financial obligation­s to the EU, the rights of European expatriate­s and new arrangemen­ts for Northern Ireland.

The bill will a lso enshrine the dates of a transition period, which will keep EU-UK ties largely unchanged until December 31, 2020, to a llow both sides to sign a new trade deal.

The period can be extended for up to t wo yea rs, but London insists t his will not be necessar y.

Johnson was a leading figure in the 2016 referendum vote for Brexit and says it is time to end years of political wrangling over the result.

But the EU has warned the timetable is extremely tight to ag ree to a new relat ionship af ter Brita in leaves t he bloc’s single market and customs union.

“In case we cannot conclude an agreement by the end of 2020, we will face again a cliff edge,” European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said on Wednesday.

“This would clearly harm our interests but it will impact more the UK than us.”

The WAB will a lso include pla ns to a llow courts ot her than the Supreme Court to overturn European Court of Ju st ic e r u l i ngs, to ensu re Br it a i n c a n more s w i f t l y ex t r icate it sel f f rom European case law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia