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Teh One Who Knocks
06-09-2017, 10:03 AM
FOX News and The Associated Press


http://i.imgur.com/Vd3a5re.jpg

British Prime Minister Theresa May has no intention of resigning after her Conservative Party lost outright majority in Parliament on Friday, Sky News reported, citing unnamed sources.

May’s gamble to call an early election appeared to backfired. According to Sky News projections, Conservatives were expected to win 315 seats, while the opposition Labour Party was expected to garner 261 seats. To have majority in the House of Commons, a party would need to hold 326 seats.

The Conservatives held 330 seats in the last Parliament, compared with 229 for Labour, 54 for the Scottish National Party and nine for the Liberal Democrats.

The Conservatives remain in position to form a coalition government with the help of several Unionist Members of Parliament for North Ireland. However, if coalition negotiations fail, the outcome raises the possibility of the two major parties attempting to form minority governments – an outcome that could lead to a second general-election in the months ahead.

“This country needs a period of stability,” May told supporters after she was re-elected to her own seat in the House of Commons. “If the Conservative Party has won the most seats, it will be incumbent on us to deliver this period of stability.”

Minutes earlier, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn had called on May to step down, saying that her attempt to seek a big mandate for her government to negotiate the U.K.’s departure from the European Union had ended in “lost Conservative seats, lost votes, lost support and lost confidence.

"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,” Corbyn added.

May, who went into the election with a reputation for quiet competence, was criticized for a lackluster campaigning style and for a plan to force elderly people to pay more for their care, a proposal her opponents dubbed the "dementia tax." As the polls suggested a tightening race, pollsters spoke less often of a landslide and raised the possibility that May's majority would be eroded.

"This is completely catastrophic for the Conservatives and for Theresa May," former Conservative Treasury chief George Osborne told ITV. "Clearly if she's got a worse result than two years ago and is almost unable to form a government, then she, I doubt, will survive in the long term as Conservative Party leader."

The forecast was a victory in all but name for Labour, which had been expected to lose seats.

Labour deputy leader Tom Watson, who easily won re-election in his seat, made a savage attack on May in a speech to his supporters.

“She said she was strong and stable, the public saw that she was weak and wobbly,” said Watson, playing off the prime minister's campaign slogan. “She said she was a bloody difficult woman ... the public saw she was just a woman finding it all a bit too bloody difficult.”

“The next few days look very uncertain but one thing is sure,” Watson said. “Theresa May's authority has been undermined in this election."

The result was also bad news for the Scottish National Party, which by early Friday had lost 21 of its 54 seats. Among the casualties was Alex Salmond, a former first minister of Scotland and one of the party's highest-profile lawmakers.

A big loss could complicate the SNP's plans to push for a new referendum on Scottish independence as Britain prepares to leave the EU.

"Indy Ref 2 is dead in Scotland," said Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson, using a short form for a second independence referendum.

May called the election seven weeks ago, when her party was well ahead in the polls.

But things didn't go to plan.

Brexit failed to emerge as a major issue in the campaign, as both the Conservatives and Labour said they would respect voters' wishes and go through with the divorce.

Then, attacks that killed 30 people in Manchester and London twice brought the campaign to a halt, sent a wave of anxiety through Britain and forced May to defend the government's record on fighting terrorism. Corbyn accused the Conservatives of undermining Britain's security by cutting the number of police on the streets.

Eight people were killed near London Bridge on Saturday when three men drove a van into pedestrians and then stabbed revelers in an area filled with bars and restaurants. Two weeks earlier, a suicide bomber killed 22 people as they were leaving a concert in Manchester. Before the election, five people died during a vehicle and knife attack near Parliament on March 22.

Rachel Sheard, who cast her vote near the site of the London Bridge attack, said the election hadn't gone as expected — and that it certainly wasn't about Brexit.

"I don't think that's in the hearts and minds of Londoners at the minute, (not) nearly as much as security is," said Sheard, 22. "It was very scary on Saturday."

While security was on many voters' minds, it was far from the only issue.

"It's important, but it's only one issue amongst several," said 68-year-old Mike Peacroft. "I wouldn't necessarily say it's at the top. Obviously at my end of the (age) spectrum I'm more interested in things like pensions and so forth, NHS health care — plus schooling, those are really my main concerns."

deebakes
06-09-2017, 12:27 PM
:excellent:

Teh One Who Knocks
06-09-2017, 12:53 PM
Kim Hjelmgaard and Jane Onyanga-Omara , USA TODAY


LONDON — ​Prime Minister Theresa May's gamble to strengthen her power by calling an early election failed spectacularly on Friday as her Conservative Party lost its majority in Parliament in a result that puts pressure on her to resign and complicates exit talks with the European Union.

May said the party will work with Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) to run the country in a statement in Downing Street. It followed a meeting between May and Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace, where she asked the monarch for permission to form a government. The Conservatives remain the biggest party. The exact nature of the partnership the Conservatives and the DUP will have wasn't immediately clear.

The outcome of the vote resulted in a so-called hung Parliament, in which neither May's party nor the main opposition Labour Party led by Jeremy Corbyn received enough support to form a government without help from smaller parties.

Britain's Parliament has 650 seats and 326 are needed to produce an overall winner. The Conservatives won 319 seats, Labour 261, the Scottish National Party 35 and the Liberal Democrats 12. The DUP has 10 seats in Britain's Parliament at Westminster.

The result comes just days before Britain faces difficult talks over terms for leaving the EU — formal negotiations are due to begin June 19.

The shock outcome — a far cry from the landslide victory predicted for May's party in April — raised questions over whether she would resign as prime minister, although she has signaled she is prepared to stay on. On Friday, May said her party would "provide stability" for the country whatever the election outcome.

Corbyn called for May to resign but the BBC reported she had no intention of doing so. Several Conservative politicians also suggested she consider her position.

"This is a very bad moment for the Conservative Party, and we need to take stock," Conservative lawmaker Anna Soubry said. "And our leader needs to take stock as well."

Labour could also attempt to form a new government if May is unable to. Corbyn said Friday that he was "ready to serve."

"Corbyn emerges stronger than ever, May emerges commanding the most seats but weaker than ever, with absolutely no gain in her mandate," said Jonathan Golub, an expert in British politics at Reading University.

The British pound fell more than 2% to $1.2642 on Friday as markets reacted to the political uncertainty the outcome brings.

"Theresa May has put Brexit in jeopardy," said Paul Nuttall, the leader of the pro-Brexit U.K. Independence Party. "I said at the start this election was wrong. Hubris."

Nuttall quit as UKIP leader later Friday, after the party failed to win any seats.
Earlier, May looked tense as she delivered remarks after being re-elected to her Maidenhead constituency, 30 miles west of London. "The country needs a period of stability and whatever the result the Conservative Party will ensure that we fulfill our duty in ensuring that stability,” she said.

In remarks delivered at his north London constituency’s election count, Corbyn said May called the election to get a new mandate and the "mandate she got was one of lost support.” He said it was time for her "to go.

In the last parliamentary election in 2015, then-prime minister David Cameron's Conservative Party won 331 seats and Labour won 232. Britain's referendum on EU membership in June 2016 was narrowly approved by the public, 52% to 48%, prompting Cameron — who opposed Brexit — to resign. May, the interior minister at the time, succeeded him.

During the campaign, May vowed to build a "stronger, fairer and more prosperous Britain," while Corbyn's signature campaign slogan was to govern "for the many, not the few."

The election came after three deadly terror attacks in Britain in less than three months.

During the campaign, Corbyn condemned the Conservatives for cutting the number of police officers by 20,000 since 2010. He also hammered May on her lack of detail on domestic policies on education, health care and welfare policies.

The exact impact on Britain's EU talks was unclear.

Speaking Friday on Europe 1 radio, French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said he doesn’t believe British voters have changed their minds about leaving the bloc.

"These are discussions that will be long and that will be complex. So let’s not kid ourselves," he said. "I’m not sure that we should read, from the results of this vote, that Britons’ sovereign decision on Brexit has been cast into doubt in any way."