Khaleej Times

May fights to restore Cabinet unity after high profile exits

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london — British Prime Minister Theresa May met with her shakenup Cabinet on Tuesday as she tried to restore government unity after the resignatio­ns of two top ministers over Brexit.

May has spent the past few days fighting for her political life as first Brexit Secretary David Davis and then Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson quit, saying May’s plans for future relations with the European Union did not live up to their idea of Brexit.

May, who has tried to keep calm and carry on, said in a tweet that it was a “productive Cabinet meeting” and she was “looking forward to a busy week.”

The resignatio­ns rocked May in a week that includes a NATO summit starting Wednesday and a UK visit by US President Donald Trump that begins Thursday.

Johnson quit Monday with an incendiary letter accusing May of killing “the Brexit dream” and flying “white flags” of surrender in negotiatio­ns with the European Union.

May replaced Johnson with loyal former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt, and gave Davis’ job to ambitious minister Dominic Raab in a bid to shore up her authority.

Conservati­ve lawmaker Michael Fallon, an ally of May, dismissed Johnson’s “Brexit dream” rallying cry. “Dreaming is good, probably for all of us, but we have to deal with the real world,” he said.

Fallon warned Conservati­ve rebels that a challenge to May’s leadership is “the last thing we need.”

Other pro-Brexit Cabinet ministers said they supported May and would not resign. Asked if he was planning to quit, environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove said “absolutely not.”

Two years after Britain voted 52 percent to 48 percent to leave the European Union, May is trying to find a middle way between two starkly differing views —within her party and the country — of the UK’s relationsh­ip with Europe.

Pro-Europeans want to retain close economic ties with the bloc and its market of 500 million people, while some Brexit supporters want a clean break to make it possible to strike new trade deals around the world.

A plan agreed by May’s Cabinet last week seeks to keep the UK and the EU in a free-trade zone for goods, and commits Britain to maintainin­g the same rules as the bloc for goods and agricultur­al products.

May says the plan will deliver frictionle­ss trade with Europe and avoid a hard border between the UK’s Northern Ireland region and EU member Ireland. —

 ?? AP ?? British Prime Minister theresa May with her Cabinet as she tries to restore government unity after the resignatio­ns of two top ministers over Brexit. —
AP British Prime Minister theresa May with her Cabinet as she tries to restore government unity after the resignatio­ns of two top ministers over Brexit. —

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