The Morning Call

Former UK Prime Minister May visits Lehigh University

Talks elections, Israel-Hamas war

- By Daniel Patrick Sheehan

Surveying the flaming world from a stage at Lehigh University on Tuesday, Theresa May offset the trepidatio­n with a few flashes of hope and humor, delivered gently but firmly in the sort of accent Americans have associated with British competence and pluck at least since Winston Churchill.

If May, the former British prime minister, didn’t have answers for the planet’s most pressing problems — especially the military horrors leading the news every day — she indicated where those answers may lie: in cooperatio­n and

compromise, notions that seem to be aging badly in this era of political division.

“Elections are won on center ground,” said May, who served as prime minister 2016-19. The conservati­ve leader warned that the loss of that center to political polarity and absolutism is a threat to democracy and, in consequenc­e, world security.

“You take the same view as me, in which case you’re a saint, or you disagree, in which case you’re the devil incarnate,” she said.

May noted that the decline in civility and compromise has been hastened by the rise of social media, likening it to giving a public forum to the man at the end of the bar who until now had been relegated to muttering his opinions into his beer.

“Now he mutters into social media and discovers all the other people muttering at the end of the bar,” she said.

This compelling sizing-up of what ails the world is what Lehigh hoped for when it invited May — referred to now as Lady May, member of Parliament for the constituen­cy of Maidenhead — to inaugurate “Compelling Perspectiv­es,” its new program of discourse and debate on challengin­g topics.

The evening’s theme was national security. Hosted by Lehigh President Joseph J. Helble, the discussion was broad enough to encompass the Israel-Hamas war and the potential impact of artificial intelligen­ce, among other topics.

The Middle East conflict arose repeatedly, with May voicing her hope for a two-state solution — establishi­ng a state for Israelis and another for Palestinia­ns — and her dread of a wider conflict.

May was the second female prime minister in British history, after Margaret Thatcher. She succeeded David Cameron, who resigned after British voters narrowly passed the Brexit referendum calling on the nation to leave the European Union.

May’s inability to craft a deal for the departure led to her resignatio­n. She said Brexit negotiatio­ns were an example of leaders abandoning compromise, with the victors offering nothing to appease the 48% of Britons who wanted to remain in the EU.

Before occupying 10 Downing Street, May served as home secretary, tasked with keeping the nation secure. She was in the role as the nation prepared for the 2012 Olympics in London, an imposing logistical challenge that required the constructi­on of stadiums and other buildings.

“From absolutely Day 1, security was being built into those buildings,” she said, noting the importance of foresight and preparatio­n as a nation develops its infrastruc­ture.

May also talked about overcoming the reluctance to share intelligen­ce with other nations, using the story of Sergei Skripal as an example. In the English city of Salisbury in 2018, the former Russian intelligen­ce agent and his daughter, Yulia, were poisoned by a nerve agent in an assassinat­ion attempt.

Both lived, but several months later, a woman who accidental­ly came in contact with the perfume bottle used to disperse the agent died.

May said her government’s intensive investigat­ion concluded Russia was behind the assassinat­ion attempt. The nation shared its intelligen­ce and the result was the expulsion of Russian diplomats and other personnel from 28 countries.

“We achieved that because we were willing to share intelligen­ce,” May said.

May prompted two rounds of applause in answering students who challenged her on Israel’s actions in Gaza, where Hamas militants are embedded among civilians. One accused the Jewish state of war crimes and a 75-year history of oppression amounting to genocide.

Israel, May said, has a right to defend itself, “but should do that in line with internatio­nal law.” Hamas, meanwhile, “does not represent all Palestinia­n people.”

Helble said the next Compelling Perspectiv­es event will be in the spring, with another speaker offering a different take on the same topic. Details of that event will be announced later.

 ?? CHRISTA NEU/LEHIGH UNIVERSITY ?? Former British Prime Minister Theresa May speaks with Lehigh University President Joseph J. Helble on Tuesday during the university’s first Compelling Perspectiv­es speaker series.
CHRISTA NEU/LEHIGH UNIVERSITY Former British Prime Minister Theresa May speaks with Lehigh University President Joseph J. Helble on Tuesday during the university’s first Compelling Perspectiv­es speaker series.

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