Tag Archives: Theresa May

Race for UK Prime begins: Matt Hancock latest candidate to enter race

 

Jeremy Hunt, Boris Johnson, Rory Stewart and Esther McVey
Jeremy Hunt, Boris Johnson, Rory Stewart and Esther McVey have already said they will run for the leadership

LONDON-(MaraviPost)-The race to become the next Conservative Party leader has begun, following Theresa May’s announcement that she will step down next month.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock is the fifth Tory to enter the race.

He told the BBC that delivering Brexit was “mission critical” and Mrs May’s successor must be more “brutally honest” about the “trade-offs” required to get a deal through Parliament.

The leadership contest will determine who is the UK’s next prime minister.

Party bosses expect a new leader to be chosen by the end of July.

She agreed with chairman of the Tory backbench 1922 Committee, Sir Graham Brady, that the process to choose a new leader should begin the week after she stands down.

Five candidates have, so far, confirmed their intention to stand:

  • Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt
  • International Development Secretary Rory Stewart
  • Health Secretary Matt Hancock
  • Former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson
  • Former Work and Pensions Secretary Esther McVey

‘Fresh face’ needed

Announcing his candidacy, Mr Hancock ruled out a snap general election in order to resolve the Brexit stalemate, saying this would be “disastrous for the country” and would risk seeing the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in power “by Christmas”.

Instead, he said his focus would be on getting a Brexit deal through the current Parliament and “levelling” with MPs about what this would mean for the UK.

He told Radio 4’s Today programme he would push harder on alternative arrangements to the Northern Irish backstop but also be more upfront than Mrs May had been about what compromises the UK would have to make.

Amber RuddREUTERS; Amber Rudd is not standing but wants to shape the debate on Brexit

He said there was no point in becoming prime minister unless he was straightforward about the trade offs – “between sovereignty and market access and the trade-offs to get a deal through this Parliament”.

He also said the party needed a “leader for the future not just for now”, capable of appealing to younger voters.

“We need to move on from the horrible politics of the last three years,” he said.

“We need a fresh start and a fresh face to ensure this country wins the battles of the 2020s and remains prosperous for many years to come.”

‘Huge tensions’

Mr Stewart warned other candidates to tell the truth about what a no-deal Brexit would mean.

“There are huge tensions in the race,” he told Radio 4’s Today.

“People will be encouraged to promise things they can’t deliver… the most dramatic of which are people who are going to be encouraged to promise a no-deal Brexit.”

He said Parliament would simply not vote for leaving the EU without a deal and, even if the UK did leave that way, it would leave the country in a limbo.

“It is not a destination. It is a failure to reach a destination. What they are probably promising is failure, delay and endless uncertainty.”

Theresa May: How the PM fought through Brexit battles

More than a dozen more senior Conservatives are believed to be seriously considering running – including Sir Graham, who has resigned as chair of the 1922 Committee.

Most bookmakers have Mr Johnson as favourite, in front of former Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab and Environment Secretary Michael Gove, who has yet to declare his hand.

Work and Pensions Secretary Amber Rudd has ruled herself out, telling the BBC the party and the country wants “someone who is more enthusiastic about Brexit than I am”.

Asked who she would support, she told Radio 4’s Today she would “not malign” any of the candidates but would prefer someone who “wants to find a compromise” on Brexit and be realistic about what can be achieved”.

‘Do things differently’

Tory MPs have until the week commencing 10 June to put their name forward, and any of them can stand – as long as they have the backing of two parliamentary colleagues.

The candidates will be whittled down until two remain, and in July all party members will vote to decide on the winner.

The Conservative Party had 124,000 members, as of March last year. The last leader elected by the membership was David Cameron in 2005, as Theresa May was unopposed in 2016.

It will be the first time Conservative members have directly elected a prime minister, as opposed to a leader of the opposition.

Announcing her departure in Downing Street, Mrs May urged her successor to “seek a way forward that honours the result of the referendum” and seek “consensus” in Parliament.

Contender Mr Johnson told an economic conference in Switzerland on Friday that a new leader would have “the opportunity to do things differently”.

Outlining his Brexit position, he said: “We will leave the EU on 31 October, deal or no deal. The way to get a good deal is to prepare for a no deal.”

Meanwhile, shadow chancellor John McDonnell suggested Labour might need to harden its position on another Brexit referendum if the Tories elected someone willing to pursue a no-deal exit.

Mr McDonnell told Today that “some form of public vote” would definitely be needed in that situation and he would seek to talk to MPs from all parties to potentially try and bring down a government that tried to take the UK out without a deal.

Who are the Conservative members?

Most members of most parties in the UK are pretty middle-class. But Conservative Party members are the most middle-class of all: 86% fall into the ABC1 category.

Around a quarter of them are, or were, self-employed and nearly half of them work, or used to, in the private sector.

Nearly four out of 10 put their annual income at over £30,000, and one in 20 put it at over £100,000. As such, Tory members are considerably better-off than most voters.

Chart showing how a Conservative leader is elected

UK Prime Minister Theresa May says she will resign before next phase of Brexit

 

LONDON-(MaraviPost)-Theresa May has said she will step down as prime minister before the next phase of Brexit negotiations in a bid to get Eurosceptic MPs to back her withdrawal deal.

 

The UK prime minister said she would make way for another Conservative leader after listening to the demands of MPs for a new leadership team.

 

She did not set a date for her departure as she spoke to a 1922 Committee meeting of Conservative backbenchers.

Prime Minister May tells Brexiters she’ll quit if they vote for her Brexit deal 

May tells Brexiters she’ll quit if they vote for her Brexit deal - ITV
As rebellious MPs pile pressure on Theresa May to resign, she has reportedly promised chief Brexiteers to step down if they back her troubled divorce plan, according to ITV political editor.

The UK prime minister has just offered to swap her political career for the prospect of the Brexit deal being approved by Parliament, according to ITV political editor Robert Peston.

“I am reliably told that Theresa May told Boris Johnson, Iain Duncan Smith, Steve Baker, Jacob Rees-Mogg, David Davis et al at Chequers that she will quit if they vote for her deal, including the backstop they hate.” says May

However, there isn’t “a lot of trust” that May would actually quit, as “she gave no specifics.” Another problem is that even if she persuaded all Tory MPs to support her Brexit plan, she still doesn’t have enough votes for it to pass through Parliament.

Brexiteer Nigel Evans said Monday that a number of Tory lawmakers wanted an orderly replacement of leadership once May manages to get her deal over the line. His comments come after the UK press on Sunday reported that May was facing a coup from angry ministers who want an emergency prime minister installed to see the Brexit deal through.

“Clearly a number of people do not want the prime minister anywhere near the next phase of negotiations which is the future trading relationship between ourselves and the European Union, Evans told BBC radio.

He added that May should resign if her Brexit deal is rejected by Parliament for a third time, if it goes to a vote later this week.

“I hope that the cabinet will tell the prime minister that the game is up,” Bridgen told Sky News ahead of Monday’s meeting of ministers.Evans’ comments were echoed by fellow Eurosceptic MP, Andrew Bridgen.

Noting that May had lost the confidence of the parliamentary party, the cabinet, and Tory members across the country, Bridgen called for fresh elections that would see MPs supportive of Brexit elected to the House of Commons.

However, he shied away from backing any opposition Labour Party motion that would bring down May’s government prematurely.

Brexit: PM May to bring third Brexit deal vote to Commons

How MPs rejected a no-deal Brexit

 

LONDON-(MaraviPost)-Theresa May will make a third attempt to get her EU withdrawal deal through Parliament in the next week.

She told MPs that if her deal fails again to get their backing, a lengthy delay to Brexit may be needed.

The prime minister’s warning comes ahead of a Commons vote later on whether to ask the EU for permission to delay Brexit beyond 29 March.

MPs voted on Wednesday evening to reject a no-deal Brexit under any circumstances.

According to BBC, no date has yet been set for the third so-called “meaningful vote”.

What’s happening today?

MPs will vote on a government motion which could see a delay to the UK’s departure from the EU.

The UK government said there could be a short delay to Brexit, or a much longer one, depending on whether MPs backed the prime minister’s existing withdrawal deal by 20 March – the day before the next EU summit.

If MPs approve Mrs May’s deal before that summit in Brussels, then the extension would be until 30 June.

However, the PM warned that if the deal – which has twice been rejected by overwhelming majorities – is not approved, a longer extension will be needed, requiring the UK to take part in elections for the European Parliament in May.

“I do not think that would be the right outcome,” said Mrs May. “But the House needs to face up to the consequences of the decisions it has taken.”

The DUP – which twice rejected Mrs May’s deal in the Commons – said it was due to have talks with the government on Thursday to see if a solution could be found allowing its MPs to support the PM in a future vote.

A party spokesperson said they wanted to find “a sensible deal for the entire UK and one that works for our neighbours in the Republic of Ireland”.

What happened last night?

In a night of high drama on Wednesday, the Commons first voted on an amendment to reject the UK exiting the EU without a deal under any circumstances, by a margin of four.

That meant the government’s original motion – which had stated that the UK should not leave the EU without a deal on 29 March – was changed at the last minute.

The government had wanted to keep control of the Brexit process, and keep no-deal on the table, so they then ordered Conservative MPs to vote against their own motion.

That tactic failed. Government ministers defied those orders and there were claims Mrs May had lost control of her party.

The updated motion, to reject a no-deal Brexit under any circumstances, was passed by 321 to 278, a majority of 43.

However, Wednesday’s no-deal vote is not binding – under current law the UK could still leave without a deal on 29 March, unless an extension is agreed with the EU.

How did my MP vote on 13 March?

Enter a postcode, or the name or constituency of your MP

Presentational white space

Speaking after the result of the vote was read out, Mrs May said: “The options before us are the same as they always have been.

“The legal default in EU and UK law is that the UK will leave without a deal unless something else is agreed. The onus is now on every one of us in this House to find out what that is.”

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said that Parliament must now take control of the Brexit process and his party will work across the House of Commons to seek a compromise solution.

What is the EU saying?

On Thursday morning, European Council president Donald Tusk tweeted that he would “appeal to the EU27 to be open to a long extension if the UK finds it necessary to rethink its Brexit strategy and build consensus around it”.

BBC Europe correspondent Kevin Connolly said that before approving any extension to Article 50 – the legal instrument by which the UK will leave the EU – EU leaders would want to know “how long an extension the UK requires and how it proposes to use the time”.

A European Commission spokesperson said: “There are only two ways to leave the EU: with or without a deal. The EU is prepared for both.

“To take no deal off the table, it is not enough to vote against no deal – you have to agree to a deal.

“We have agreed a deal with the prime minister and the EU is ready to sign it.”

How did ministers vote last night?

Thirteen government ministers – including Work and Pensions Secretary Amber Rudd, Business Secretary Greg Clark, Justice Secretary David Gauke and Scottish Secretary David Mundell – defied the government whips by abstaining in the vote.

Work and pensions minister Sarah Newton voted against the orders of the whips and has now resigned.

Mr Mundell said he backed the PM’s deal and had always made clear his opposition to a no-deal Brexit.


 

Brexiteers outline EU deal terms

Theresa MayImage copyrightEPA

 

LONDON-(MaraviPost)-Eight pro-Brexit lawyers, including seven Tory and DUP MPs, have outlined the key terms Theresa May must deliver to secure their support for her deal to leave the European Union.

They want to examine any agreement Attorney General Geoffrey Cox reaches with Brussels over the Northern Ireland backstop – to ensure it is temporary.

The backstop is designed to avoid a hard border with Ireland after Brexit.

It comes as a senior Brexiteer pointed to MPs’ growing mood for compromise.

According to BBC, Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the influential 1922 committee of backbench Conservative MPs, said: “Most MPs are in a mood to compromise, but the danger of this backstop becoming permanent is a real one and it has to be tackled.

“My conversations with senior diplomats and politicians from across Europe have given me cause for optimism that a breakthrough is near.”

He added: “We know what is needed to shift the logjam. The attorney general needs to give a legally binding guarantee that the backstop is temporary.”

The UK is due to leave the EU on 29 March, with or without a deal.

‘Three tests’

MPs last month rejected the withdrawal deal Theresa May has reached with the EU by 230 votes – the biggest defeat for a sitting government in history.

Mrs May believes the majority of the MPs who voted against her deal – including 118 Conservatives – would back it if she managed to secure changes that would prevent the UK being tied to EU customs rules indefinitely.

She has promised MPs another vote on her deal by 12 March – and if that fails, she says MPs will get a vote on whether the UK should leave without a deal, and then, by 14 March, a vote on whether Brexit should be postponed for a short period.

Attorney General Geoffrey Cox is in talks with EU officials on changes to the Irish backstop clause – seen as the sticking point for many Tories – which could tie the UK to EU customs union until a permanent trade deal has been agreed.

On Sunday, the lawyers from the European Research Group (ERG) of Brexiteer Tories, led by Jacob Rees-Mogg, announced “three tests” the government must pass to win their backing.

In private talks with Mr Cox, the ERG called for a legally binding mechanism to escape the backstop, with a clear exit route and an unambiguous rewrite of the language in the government’s legal advice, according to The Sunday Times.

‘Improved deal’

The stance has been drawn up in conjunction with Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, which Mrs May relies on to keep her in power, and which has been calling for the backstop clause to be removed from the agreement.

In an interview with the Sunday Times, one of the lawyers – Michael Tomlinson – said they must see any concession from Brussels “in black and white” and in plenty of time before the PM asks Parliament to vote on her revised deal.

Getting the backing of the ERG for her deal would be a major boost for Mrs May but would still not guarantee she could get it through Parliament.

Caroline Flint
Caroline Flint: Labour MPs should consider backing ‘improved deal’

Some Tory MPs would prefer to see the UK leave without a deal, rather than the PM’s deal, even with changes. And there are a variety of views within the ERG itself, with some leading figures taking a more hardline approach than others.

Mrs May could find herself relying on the votes of Labour MPs from Leave-voting parts of the country, who are in favour of Brexit but want guarantees from the PM that workers’ rights will not fall behind the EU after Britain’s departure.

Labour MP Caroline Flint told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday that given the choice between “an improved deal and no deal, we should seriously consider the improved deal”.

She said as many as 30 Labour MPs felt the same way, with even more against another EU referendum.

“I think there is something like 60 or 70 Labour MPs who feel as strongly as I do against a second referendum, but also I think it’s important to recognise that many of those MPs also feel that we have to move on, we have to stop a no-deal and if there’s an improved offer on the table, then Labour should engage with that sincerely,” she added.

Labour has so far failed to get MPs to back its alternative Brexit plan, which would see the UK in a permanent customs union with the EU, and has now said it will attempt to get a new EU referendum.

Shadow chancellor John McDonnell suggested Labour frontbenchers would be expected to vote for an amendment calling for a referendum, when MPs vote on Mrs May’s deal on or before 12 March.

“I think on an issue as this we would see a whip, but also you’ve got to respect people’s views and their constituency interests as well, and the whipping arrangement will be determined in discussion in due course,” he told Sophy Ridge.

‘Bollocks to Brexit’ protester leaps in front of Theresa May’s motorcade in Brussels 

‘Bollocks to Brexit’ protester leaps in front of Theresa May’s motorcade in Brussels (VIDEO)
Less than two hours after landing in Brussels, Theresa May’s convoy was set upon by an anti-Brexit protester who rushed the motorcade as it pulled up outside the headquarters of the European Commission.

According to RT Question More online paper, demonstrator Mark Johnston was one of several participants in the “Bollocks to Brexit” protest which greeted the embattled British prime minister as she arrived for yet more negotiations with the EU regarding Britain’s impending divorce from the union.

Embedded video

“Are you willing to get run over for Brexit?” a reporter asked Johnston after a short scuffle with security.

“I’d rather the prime minister not crash out,” Johnston wryly responds, in reference to the placard he brandished at May’s passing vehicle.

May is hoping to secure concessions from the EU regarding the Irish backstop issue which has repeatedly scuppered negotiations, and threatened her leadership on several occasions.

“There are three or four of them, actually. You can still see them just over here gathering with yellow hats on which say ‘something to Brexit’, the B word. I’ll let you guess what that is,” Sky News Europe correspondent Mark Stone said, describing the scene.The UK’s parliament is expected to vote, once again, on whatever the latest draft deal may be on February 14.

“I don’t know if it actually was her car to try and stop it and pretty quickly some plain clothes Belgian security officers moved him out of the way and the car then went in.”

Breaking Now !!: Brexit Deal Rejected in Parliament dealing a blow to Theresa May

Brexit Defeat
Theresa May suffers crushing Brexit defeat

Theresa May has been handed a crushing defeat in the crunch vote on her Brexit deal.

MPs overwhelmingly rejected the PM’s agreement by 432 votes to 202, the worst defeat suffered by a UK Government.

Labour is expected to try and trigger an early general election by tabling a motion of no confidence in the government.

The Prime Minister is set to be heading back to Brussels in yet another attempt to secure concessions from the EU on the deal – something EU Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker has repeatedly said he is not willing to do.

22 dead after blast at Ariana Grande concert in Manchester

Manchester bomber probably had ISIS training, US official says

Manchester, England (CNN)Monday’s attack outside an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena killed at least 22 people, including children, and was carried out by a lone suspect carrying a bomb, Manchester Police said.

“The attacker, I can confirm, died at the arena. We believe the attacker was carrying an improvised explosive device, which he detonated, causing this atrocity,” said Chief Constable Ian Hopkins.

While police believe the suspect was acting alone, investigations are ongoing to establish if he was part of a network. Continue reading 22 dead after blast at Ariana Grande concert in Manchester