May tells lawmakers she'll stay as long as they want her
Theresa
May told her party on Monday she would serve as prime minister as long
as they wanted after a botched election gamble cost the party its
majority in parliament and weakened London's hand days before formal
Brexit negotiations.
With
British politics thrust into the deepest turmoil since last June's
shock Brexit vote, EU leaders were left wondering how the divorce talks
would open next week.
Despite
her party's expectations of a landslide victory, May lost her majority
in parliament, pushing her into rushed talks on a support agreement with
a small eurosceptic Northern Irish Protestant party with 10
parliamentary seats.
May
faced Conservative party lawmakers at a meeting of its 1922 Committee.
Despite anger at the election, she was cheered briefly at the start of
the meeting.
"She
said 'I'm the person who got us into this mess and I'm the one who is
going to get us out of it,'" said one Conservative lawmaker who
attended. "She said she will serve us as long as we want her."
Lawmakers,
who are by tradition not named at such meetings, told Reuters that
there were no dissenting voices and that the party had no appetite for a
leadership election.
May appeared contrite, sought to apologise for her failed election gamble and gave an explanation of what went wrong.
While some members of her party have said she will have to go eventually, May is expected to stay on as prime minister at least for now.
May
has promised to start the formal Brexit talks next week but her
authority has collapsed since the election result and opponents took her
woes as a chance to push back against her Brexit strategy.
During
the campaign, May cast herself as the only leader competent enough to
navigate the tortuous Brexit negotiations that will shape the future of
the United Kingdom and its $2.5 trillion economy.
At
the meeting with lawmakers in Parliament, May recognised that a broader
consensus needed to be built for Brexit and made clear that she would
listen to all wings of the party on the issue.
She mocked Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, a socialist, as incompetent and unrealistic, but his electoral campaign energised the youth vote and wiped out the Conservatives' majority in parliament.
May plans a clean break from the EU, involving withdrawal from Europe's single market and customs union and limits on immigration from the EU.
MAY'S BREXIT?
Her
spokesman insisted her position on Brexit remained unchanged but
Scottish Conservatives were pushing for her to move the focus onto
economic growth and away from immigration, sources in the Scottish
branch of the party said.
EU talks might not begin on June 19 as expected,
Brexit minister David Davis said and the Queen's Speech, due on the
same day in which the government traditionally spells out its policy
plans, has also been delayed, the BBC reported.
May
wants to negotiate the divorce and the future trading relationship with
the EU before Britain leaves in March 2019, followed by what she calls a
phased implementation process to give business time to prepare for the
impact of the divorce.
But
her election failure means she must now go into Britain's most complex
negotiations since World War Two with her eye firmly on the different
factions within her Conservative Party, which has been divided over EU
membership for a generation.
Opponents
of a sharp break include Ruth Davidson, leader of the Scottish
Conservatives. who helped the party win 12 more seats in Scotland in
contrast to losses elsewhere. She has called for a closer relationship with the EU after Brexit.
"There can be changes in the offer of Brexit as we go forward," Davidson told reporters in London after meeting May.
"What's clear is that there is going to be a real imperative on the economic impact of Brexit, to make sure that Brexit works for the whole country, to make that we're able to pursue free trade," Davidson said.
May's
spokesman said it remained government policy to cut net migration to
under 100,000 and Brexit Minister David Davis also said walking away
without securing a deal with the remaining 27 EU states remained a
possibility.
While
Britons voted by 52 to 48 percent for Brexit in last year's referendum,
Scots strongly backed staying in the bloc and Nicola Sturgeon, First
Minister in Scotland's devolved assembly, said a so-called Hard Brexit
was "dead in the water".
Ratings
agency Moody's and Irish Prime Minister-designate Leo Varadkar also
said the election made the opportunity of a "Soft Brexit" more likely,
but Davis downplayed the chances of Britain staying in the single
market.
PRIME MINISTER MAY?
Before
the government can do anything it must finalise a deal with the
Northern Irish Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). May is due to meet its
leader Arlene Foster on Tuesday.
In
an article in the Belfast Telegraph, Foster listed three priorities,
including getting Northern Ireland's devolved power-sharing government
at Stormont working again.
"We
stood on a clear policy platform of wanting to strengthen the Union, of
working for a good deal for Northern Ireland as the United Kingdom
leaves the EU, and of promising to do our best to get Stormont up and
running again for the benefit of all," Foster wrote.
"We will use the position we find ourselves in to do as we promised."
Davis, who said that some policies in the government's programme would now be pruned back, was one of a number of senior Conservatives to publicly pledge loyalty to May.
Foreign
Secretary Boris Johnson, who is touted as the favourite to replace May
should she be forced out, called on colleagues to rally behind her.
However,
George Osborne, a former finance minister who is now editor of London's
Evening Standard newspaper and a vocal critic of May, said she appeared
a "dead woman walking".
Britain's descent into political crisis just days before the Brexit talks begin has sapped confidence amongst business leaders and infuriated bosses who were already grappling with the fallout from the vote to leave the EU.
The
uncertainty has hit business confidence, according to a survey by the
Institute of Directors (IoD). It found a negative swing of 34 points in
confidence from its last survey in May.
The
pound slid to its lowest level for nearly two months after the vote,
but the fall was much less severe than the one sparked by the Brexit
vote in June 2016. On Monday, the currency was under pressure once
again.
"The UK has had a reputation, earned over the generations, for stability and predictability in its government," said a senior executive at a multi-national company listed on the London FTSE 100, speaking on condition of anonymity.
"That reputation in 12 months has been destroyed, truly destroyed.
First by Brexit and now through this election. That has really profound
implications for multinational businesses that have made a long-term
bet on London being the sensible place to base themselves."
Reuters
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