Business Day

May says she can manage Brexit

• British prime minister dismisses talk of division among her top ministers on EU strategy as Conservati­ve Party gathers for conference

- Elizabeth Piper and Kate Holton Manchester, England /Reuters

Apologisin­g for losing her Conservati­ve Party’s majority in the June election, Prime Minister Theresa May responded to her critics on Sunday by saying she had the right strategy to lead Britain and win a Brexit deal.

May, who has faced calls from within her party to step down, wants to use the Conservati­ves’ annual conference in the northern English city of Manchester this week to try to reset her agenda, offering money to students and those people she once described as “just about managing” in Britain.

In an interview with BBC television, she dismissed talk of rifts among top ministers, saying they were united on their programme and, more importantl­y, on Brexit. That came a day after Foreign Minister Boris Johnson, perhaps May’s biggest rival, set out four personal red lines in the complex talks with the EU.

But with thousands of protesters just outside the conference gates demanding that Britain stay in the EU, May has a long way to go to unite not only her governing party, but also the country after 2016’s divisive referendum vote.

“We’ve listened to the message that came from that [June] election. But I’ve been very clear, I called the election, I led the campaign, I take my responsibi­lity and I’m sorry that some very good members of parliament lost their seats,” May said in an appeal to those party members still angry over the Brexit vote.

“What I have is a cabinet that is united in the mission of this government ... and agreed on the approach that we took in Florence,” May said about a speech she made in Italy in September to try to kick-start Brexit talks.

“Boris is absolutely behind the Florence speech and the line that we have taken.”

Divisions in her cabinet have broken out into the open, with ministers using the media to air their difference­s not only on Brexit, but also on the government’s approach to austerity, with many Conservati­ves concerned about the growing appeal of the main opposition Labour Party.

After ministers agreed to seek a transition period following Britain’s departure from the EU in March 2019, Johnson said on the eve of the conference that this should last for two years at most; that Britain should not accept new EU or European Court of Justice rulings during transition; must not make payments for single market access when the transition ends; and should not agree to shadow EU regulation­s to gain access.

While not a clear departure from May’s own stance, it increases pressure on her not to give too much away in the talks to unravel more than 40 years of union with EU negotiator­s, who say they have yet to make enough progress to move to a discussion of the two sides’ future relationsh­ip.

One former minister, Nicky Morgan, has described Johnson’s pressure as a derelictio­n of duty. “And it has to stop.”

WEAKENED

Following a bullish Labour conference last week, May hopes to fire up thousands of Conservati­ve party members who feel let down by the disastrous election campaign, when their leader was dubbed by critics “the Maybot” for her repetition of slogans.

May is now dependent on a small Northern Irish party for a majority in parliament, and opinion polls indicate Labour is a growing threat, persuading rivals in the party not to try to topple her quite yet.

On her 61st birthday, she unveiled new policies to extend a programme to help people buy their own homes and to freeze student tuition fees to try to win back younger people, who have flocked to Labour. She promised Brexit supporters she would walk away if she could not get a good deal, saying the government was working on plans for a “no deal”.

 ?? Photo /AFP ?? The people shall speak: A protester in a polar bear costume takes part on Sunday in an anti-austerity demonstrat­ion organised by The People’s Assembly in Manchester to coincide with the first day of the Conservati­ve Party’s annual conference in the...
Photo /AFP The people shall speak: A protester in a polar bear costume takes part on Sunday in an anti-austerity demonstrat­ion organised by The People’s Assembly in Manchester to coincide with the first day of the Conservati­ve Party’s annual conference in the...

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