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Theresa May faces one of her biggest challenges yet — as allies and colleagues turn on her

Source: News Corp Australia Network:
June 11, 2018 at 20:31
British Prime Minister Theresa May was given the cold shoulder by US President Donald Trump — but her own colleagues had worst to say.Source:AFP
British Prime Minister Theresa May was given the cold shoulder by US President Donald Trump — but her own colleagues had worst to say.Source:AFP

BRITISH Prime Minister Theresa May is about to face one of her toughest weeks yet — and she does so knowing her allies and colleagues have their knives sharpened.

Mrs May is hoping to win a series of key votes in parliament on Tuesday and Wednesday that would secure passage of her flagship Brexit legislation. If she fails, it could be seen as vote of no confidence and her own position as prime minister may be under threat.

Far from stabbing her in the back, things have gotten so bad her own MPs are brazenly telling media: “She’s f****d.”

At the same time, she is returning from the G7 meeting in Canada where Donald Trump — the leader of a country that supposedly has a “special relationship” with the UK — deliberately snubbed her.

First Mr Trump didn’t meet with Mrs May and then when asked about close relationships with the other six leaders attending the summit he named three of them he had the strongest connection with.

“I would say that the level of relationships is a 10,” he said of the leaders, which did not include Mrs May.

Many observers are now speculating he views Mrs May as beneath them, with both camps leaking details of their strained relationship to media.

But it is at home where she has the biggest trouble brewing.

British Prime Minister Theresa May is not close to US President Donald Trump.
British Prime Minister Theresa May is not close to US President Donald Trump.Source:AFP

Her Conservative party is split about how best to pursue Brexit and even her own Cabinet Ministers are openly criticising the way she has handled divorce negotiations with the EU.

At the weekend it was reported she came close to a coup as senior ministers threatened to walk out of her government because they were unhappy with her Brexit plan.

In the end, she and her Brexit Secretary David Davis reached a compromise and the mass quitting was thwarted. But the danger remains.

According to a report in The Sunday Times, Conservative MPs are planning to oust her as early as next month as soon as the Brexit law is passed.

“Last week was a dress rehearsal,” one said, while another vowed: “She thinks she has won. She’s f****d anyway, she’s toast.”

“We will keep our heads down and then get rid of her. No one trust her anymore,” a colleague said. Extraordinarily, rebel MPs were even reportedly discussing not showing up to a Brexit vote so Mrs May would lose, just so they could demonstrate their strength — and put the prime minister in her place.

Others said there was no doubt she would be dumped before the next election, as colleagues were “waking up” to her negotiating position.

Some were more brutal.

A former minister told the Sunday Times: “She looks terrible. She is extraordinarily ill-equipped to lead. We are becoming an international laughing stock. It’s on a hair trigger now.”

In a recording obtained by BuzzFeed news, UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson was quoted as telling Conservative party donors that May’s government is ready to start playing hardball with the EU, just three weeks before Brexit is discussed among European leaders.

Mrs May will be feeling caged by her colleagues after some of their public statements.
Mrs May will be feeling caged by her colleagues after some of their public statements.Source:AFP

“I think Theresa is going to go into a phase where we are much more combative with Brussels,” Johnson said. “You’ve got to face the fact there may now be a meltdown. OK? I don’t want anybody to panic during the meltdown. No panic. … It’s going to be all right in the end.”

In the tape, he could be heard saying Mr Trump would do a better job securing Brexit than Mrs May.

“He’d go in bloody hard… There’d be all sorts of breakdowns, all sorts of chaos. Everyone would think he’d gone mad. But actually you might get somewhere. It’s a very, very good thought.”

Mrs May refused to sack him, even though the comments clearly undermined her Brexit strategy.

A hard exit would see Britain able to sign its own free trade deals — and Australia is one of the countries it is interested in — but a soft exit would see the country form a customs partnership with the EU. One option is where the UK would act on the EU’s behalf when goods arrived in the UK that are intended for the EU. The reverse would happen for goods arriving in the EU destined for the UK.

That would seriously reduce Britain’s ability to strike new trade deals — one of the key factors of Brexit, and it’s not clear even if that option is workable.

andrew.koubaridis@news.com.au

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