Safety, Brexit top talking points in UK election
Terror attacks bring urgency to campaign
LONDON — After a seven-week election campaign that veered from the boredom of staged sound bites to the trauma of two deadly attacks, Britain’s political leaders asked voters Wednesday to choose: Who is best to keep the U.K. safe and lead it out of the European Union?
Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May and opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn crisscrossed the country on the final day of campaigning, trying to woo voters with rival plans for Brexit, building a fairer society and combating a terrorist threat made all too immediate by attacks in Manchester and London.
May promised to crack down on extremism if she wins today’s vote — even if that means watering down human rights legislation.
“We are seeing the terrorist threat changing, we are seeing it evolve and we need to respond to that,” May said.
Corbyn argued that the real danger comes from Conservative cuts to police budgets.
“We won’t defeat terrorists by ripping up our basic rights and our democracy,” he said.
Polls will be open today from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. (1 a.m. today to 4 p.m. MDT), with all 650 seats in the House of Commons up for grabs. A party needs to win 326 seats to form a majority government.
May called the snap election — three years early — in a bid to boost the Conservative majority in Parliament, which she says will strengthen Britain’s hand in divorce talks with the European Union.
“Get those negotiations wrong and the consequences will be dire,” she warned Wednesday.
Brexit negotiations will take up much of the incoming government’s time over the next two years. But it has taken a back seat in the election — initially to debates about how to narrow the gap between rich and poor, then by the attacks in Manchester and London.
Regarding the former, a Conservative victory would mean continued cuts to public spending in a bid to reduce the nation’s deficit; Labour says it will pump millions more into education and health care, and raise income tax on the highest earners.
Corbyn said today’s vote offered a clear choice between “another five years of a Tory government, underfunding of services all across the UK … or a Labour government that invests for all, all across Britain.”
The deadly attacks in Manchester on May 22 and London on Saturday twice brought the campaign to a temporary halt — and put the threat from international terrorism front and center.
As May vowed to bring in new anti-terror measures, Corbyn criticized cuts to the police under the Conservatives, when the number of officers fell by almost 20,000 between 2010 and 2016.