The Jerusalem Post

May calls for party to unite on Brexit

Prime minister under pressure in Brussels and at home

- • By ELIZABETH PIPER, WILLIAM JAMES and KYLIE MACLELLAN

BIRMINGHAM, England (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Theresa May called on her Conservati­ve Party to pull together and unite behind her plan to leave the European Union, saying “if we hold our nerve” she can win a deal “that delivers for Britain.”

On the final day of her party’s conference on Wednesday, May rallied members, trying to address their concerns that the Conservati­ves are becoming increasing­ly directionl­ess under the weight of Brexit by calling on them to look to a brighter future.

Dancing onto the stage in the city of Birmingham to ABBA’s “Dancing Queen” to a standing ovation, May poked fun at herself after her dance moves were mocked on a trip to Africa and after last year’s conference when her speech was disrupted by a coughing fit, a stage intruder and a disintegra­ting set.

It was a warm welcome for a leader whose fragile position was put under further pressure after the EU rejected parts of her so-called Chequers plan and critics stepped up calls for her to rethink her strategy for Brexit, Britain’s biggest trade and foreign policy shift in more than 40 years.

But with just six months before Britain is due to leave the bloc, she has so far weathered the Brexit storm, shrugging off a barnstormi­ng speech by her former foreign minister Boris Johnson, which did little to hide his leadership ambitions.

“If we all go off in different directions in pursuit of our own vision of the perfect Brexit, we risk ending up with no Brexit at all,” she said in a clear nod to euroskepti­c lawmakers who have published their alternativ­e plan for leaving the EU.

“And there’s another reason why we need to come together. We are entering the toughest part of the negotiatio­ns .... What we are proposing is very challengin­g for the EU. But if we stick together and hold our nerve, I know we can get a deal that delivers for Britain.”

She also tried to expand her domestic agenda, attacking the main opposition Labour Party by saying its policies, including the renational­ization of mail, rail and utilities, would mean increased taxes and drive away business.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, she said, would “outsource our conscience to the Kremlin.”

Her words were aimed at easing the growing frustratio­n of some Conservati­ves who openly say their party is directionl­ess, unable to set an agenda against the divisive rows over Brexit between competing wings of the party. THE PRESSURE she is under from some in the party was underlined less than an hour before she was due to speak, when Conservati­ve lawmaker James Duddridge said he had submitted a letter to the party’s so-called 1922 committee, calling on her to resign. Forty-eight lawmakers would need to write such letters to trigger a vote of confidence in the leader.

“Turns out there is a plan. That plan is Boris,” Duddridge wrote on Twitter after Boris Johnson’s speech on Tuesday.

But in that speech, Johnson seemed to pull his punches, backing May for now while making a rallying cry for the party to return to its traditiona­l values and to “chuck Chequers” in a sign of his leadership ambitions.

Taking a swipe at Johnson, May said she was taking decisions on Brexit in the “national interest,” pressing her argument that her former foreign secretary’s alternativ­e Brexit proposals would tear the United Kingdom apart.

“It is no surprise that we have had a range of different views expressed this week,” she said. “But my job as prime minister is to do what I believe to be in the national interest. And that means two things. First, honoring the result of the referendum... and secondly, to seek a good trading and security relationsh­ip with our neighbors after we have left.”

With no agreement with the bloc over the divorce or a future relationsh­ip, the last day of the conference marks the beginning of what some officials predict will be a frenzied couple of weeks of diplomacy between London and Brussels, as the two sides try to secure a deal to end more than 40 years of partnershi­p.

May and her team face weeks of difficult conversati­ons with Brussels to win a deal, but she also faces challenges from inside her own party and from her partners in Parliament, Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party.

DUP leader Arlene Foster has used the conference to loudly set out her redlines for Brexit, repeating that she will not accept a border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom. “The redline is blood red,” she told the BBC.

In her speech, May again stuck to her Chequers plan, named after her country residence where she hashed out an agreement over the proposals in July.

“So this is our proposal. Taking back control of our borders, laws and money. Good for jobs, good for the Union. It delivers the referendum, it keeps faith with the British people,” she said. “It is in the national interest.”

 ?? (Darren Staples/Reuters) ?? BRITISH PM Theresa May dances to Abba’s ‘Dancing Queen’ before her keynote address at the Conservati­ve Party Conference in Birmingham yesterday.
(Darren Staples/Reuters) BRITISH PM Theresa May dances to Abba’s ‘Dancing Queen’ before her keynote address at the Conservati­ve Party Conference in Birmingham yesterday.

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