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British PM May appeals her Conservative party to unite over Brexit

Sunday, 30th September 2018

Theresa May.

BIRMINGHAM: British Prime Minister Theresa May has made an appeal to her Conservative Party to unite behind her to ensure the government gets a good exit deal from the European Union, insisting that her so-called Chequers plan was the right way forward.

My message to my party is let’s come together and get the best deal for Britain,” May told media on the first day of the annual Conservative Party conference.

At the start of what is set to be one of the Conservative Party’s stormiest annual conferences, May’s plans were once again attacked by two former ministers, with a former foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, calling them “deranged”.

Just six months before Britain is due to leave the EU in the country’s biggest shift in foreign and trade policy in more than 40 years, the debate over how to leave the bloc is still raging in the centre-right Conservative Party, and even in the government.

May’s already fragile leadership was put under further pressure this month when the EU rejected parts of the so-called Chequers plan. But she put a positive spin on those talks, saying she was ready to consider to the EU’s concerns.

“My message to my party is let’s come together and get the best deal for Britain,” May told the BBC in the central English city of Birmingham.

“At the heart of the Chequers plan is a free trade deal, a free trade area and frictionless trade ... Chequers at the moment is the only plan on the table that delivers on the Brexit vote ... and also delivers for the people of Northern Ireland.”

May has shown little sign of shifting away from her Chequers plan, named after her country residence where she hashed out an agreement on Brexit with her ministers in July, despite growing criticism that her proposals offer the worst of all worlds.

Johnson, who quit May’s cabinet after Chequers was agreed, called her plans “deranged” and attacked the prime minister for not believing in Brexit.

“Unlike the prime minister I campaigned for Brexit,” Johnson, the bookmakers’ favourite to succeed May, told the Sunday Times newspaper.

“Unlike the prime minister I fought for this, I believe in it, I think it’s the right thing for our country and I think that what is happening now is, alas, not what people were promised in 2016.”

Davis, who like Johnson resigned in the protest said her plan was “just wrong”, but he also said he thought it was 80-90 percent likely that the government would strike an exit deal with the EU.

(Agency inputs used in the story)

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