UK Election 2017
UK Election 2017: Theresa May to form fragile govt after poll
debacle, uncertainty over Brexit talks
British
Prime Minister Theresa May will form a government supported by a small Northern
Irish party after her Conservative Party lost its parliamentary majority in an
election debacle days before talks on Britain's EU departure are due to begin.
A
stony-faced May, speaking on the doorstep of her official Downing Street
residence, said the government would provide certainty and lead Britain in
talks with the European Union to secure a successful Brexit deal.
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| British Prime Minister Theresa May |
May
said she could rely in parliament on the support of her "friends" in
Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party after her governing Conservatives
failed to emerge as clear winners.
Confident
of securing a sweeping victory, May had called the snap election to strengthen
her hand in the European Union divorce talks. But in one of the most
sensational nights in British electoral history, a resurgent Labour Party
denied her an outright win, throwing the country into political turmoil.EU
leaders expressed fears that May's shock loss of her majority would delay the
Brexit talks, due to begin on 19 June, and so raise the risk of negotiations
failing.Her
Labour rival Jeremy Corbyn, once written off by his opponents as a no-hoper,
said May should step down and he wanted to form a minority government.
But
May, facing scorn for running a lacklustre campaign, was determined to hang on.
Just after noon, she was driven the short distance from Downing Street to
Buckingham Palace to ask Queen Elizabeth for permission to form a government
— a formality under the British system.With
649 of 650 seats declared, the Conservatives had won 318 seats and Labour 261
followed by the pro-independence Scottish National Party on 34.The
shock result thrust Northern Ireland's centre-right DUP into the role of
kingmaker, with its 10 seats enough to give the Conservatives a fragile but
workable partnership.
"Our
two parties have enjoyed a strong relationship over many years and this gives
me the confidence to believe that we will be able to work together in the
interests of the whole United Kingdom," May said.This
was likely to involve an arrangement in which the DUP would support a
Conservative minority government on key votes in parliament but not form a
formal coalition.But
with the complex talks on the divorce from the EU due to start in 10 days, it
was unclear what their direction would now be and if the so-called "Hard
Brexit" taking Britain out of a single market could still be pursued. After
winning his own seat in north London, Corbyn said May's attempt to win a bigger
mandate had backfired.
"The
mandate she's got is lost Conservative seats, lost votes, lost support and lost
confidence," he said. "I would have thought that's enough to go,
actually, and make way for a government that will be truly representative of
all of the people of this country."
Brexit risks
"We need a government that can act," EU Budget
Commissioner Guenther Oettinger told German broadcaster Deutschlandfunk.
"With a weak negotiating partner, there's a danger that the (Brexit)
negotiations will turn out badly for both sides."
The
EU's chief negotiator said the bloc's stance on Brexit and the timetable for
the talks were clear, but the divorce negotiations should only start when
Britain is ready. "Let's put our minds together on striking a deal,"
Michel Barnier said.
But
there was little sympathy from some other Europeans."Yet
another own goal, after Cameron now May, will make already complex negotiations
even more complicated," tweeted Guy Verhofstadt, the former Belgian
premier who is the European Parliament's point man for the Brexit process.
May's
predecessor David Cameron sought to silence Eurosceptic fellow Conservatives by
calling the referendum on EU membership. The result ended his career and
shocked Europe.German
conservative Markus Ferber, an EU lawmaker involved in discussions on access to
EU markets for Britain's financial sector, was scathing."The
British political system is in total disarray. Instead of strong and stable
leadership we witness chaos and uncertainty," he said, mocking May's
campaign slogan.Sterling
tumbled as much as 2.5 percent on the result while the FTSE share index opened
higher. The pound hit an eight-week low against the dollar and its lowest
levels in seven months versus the euro.
"A
working government is needed as soon as possible to avoid a further drop in the
pound," said ING currency strategist Viraj Patel in London."Dreadful
campaign"Conservative
member of parliament Anna Soubry was the first in the party to disavow May in
public, calling on the prime minister to "consider her position".
"I'm
afraid we ran a pretty dreadful campaign," Soubry said.
May had
unexpectedly called the snap election seven weeks ago, even though no vote was
due until 2020. At that point, polls predicted she would massively increase the
slim majority she had inherited from Cameron.May had
spent the campaign denouncing Corbyn as the weak leader of a spendthrift party
that would crash Britain's economy and flounder in Brexit talks, while she
would provide "strong and stable leadership" to clinch a good deal
for Britain.But her
campaign unravelled after a policy u-turn on care for the elderly, while
Corbyn's old-school socialist platform and more impassioned campaigning style
won wider support than anyone had foreseen.
In the
late stages of the campaign, Britain was hit by two Islamist militant attacks
that killed 30 people in Manchester and London, temporarily shifting the focus
ontosecurityissues.That
did not help May, who in her previous role as interior minister for six years
had overseen cuts in the number of police officers. She sought to deflect
pressure onto Corbyn, arguing he had a weak record on security matters.
"What
tonight is about is the rejection of Theresa May's version of extreme
Brexit," said Keir Starmer, Labour's policy chief on Brexit, saying his
party wanted to retain the benefits of the European single market and customs
union.Analysis
suggested Labour had benefited from a strong turnout among young voters.The
campaign had played out differently in Scotland, the main faultline being the
SNP's drive for a second referendum on independence from Britain, having lost a
plebiscite in 2014.SNP
leader and First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said it had been a disappointing
night for her party, which lost seats to the Conservatives, Labour and the
Liberal Democrats.Scottish
Conservative leader Ruth Davidson said Sturgeon should take the prospect of a
new independence referendum off the table.

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