UK Prime Minister Theresa May Could Face Leadership Challenge

UK Prime Minister Theresa May Could Face Leadership Challenge
Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May leaves 10 Downing Street in London on Sept. 12, 2018. (Reuters/Toby Melville)
Reuters
9/12/2018
Updated:
9/12/2018

LONDON—A group of about 50 lawmakers in British Prime Minister Theresa May’s government who oppose her proposals for a post-Brexit deal with the European Union have met to discuss how and when they could force her out of her job, the BBC reported on Sept. 12.

The lawmakers, part of the European Research Group (ERG), an anti-EU grouping in May’s Conservative party, met late, on Sept. 11 and openly discussed May’s future as leader, the BBC said citing an unnamed source.

A number at the meeting said they had already submitted letters of no confidence in May, the source told the BBC. Under Conservative rules, a leadership election is triggered if 15 percent of Conservative lawmakers, currently 48 out of its 315 members of parliament (MPs), demand a vote of no confidence.

The ERG has condemned May’s plans for Britain to remain in a free trade zone for goods with the EU after it leaves the bloc in March next year, but has faced criticism itself for failing to suggest a detailed alternative.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, the ERG leader, said on Sept. 11 his group would unveil its proposal on Sept. 12 for how Britain could leave the EU without constructing a hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland, one of the main sticking points in securing a Brexit deal.

The BBC said those at the meeting on Sept. 11 which did not include all the ERG’s senior figures had discussed possible scenarios depending on whether May was able to secure a deal with the EU based on her proposals.

Comments at the meeting were said to have been highly critical of May, but the BBC report said the ERG were unlikely to force a leadership election unless they were sure they had a candidate that could win.

The rift in May’s party deepened this week, with her former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who quit the cabinet over the Chequers proposal, comparing May’s plan in a newspaper column to putting a “suicide vest” on Britain’s constitution.

The eurosceptics complain that accepting free trade on goods with the EU would mean Britain had to sign up to EU regulations even after it leaves the bloc.

May’s spokesman said her so-called Chequers proposal is the only serious, credible, and negotiable plan available.

However, the Sun newspaper reported on Sept. 12 that May’s office was drawing up secret plans to ditch her Chequers blueprint if EU leaders reject it at a summit next week.

By Kylie MacLellan and Michael Holden