Tower blaze brings
fresh delay to British PM's power deal
LONDON, June 14, 2017 (AFP) - British Prime Minister Theresa May faced further delays in forming her new government on Wednesday after her would-be allies said their agreement would be put back following a deadly tower block blaze in London.
LONDON, June 14, 2017 (AFP) - British Prime Minister Theresa May faced further delays in forming her new government on Wednesday after her would-be allies said their agreement would be put back following a deadly tower block blaze in London.
The Conservative leader lost her
parliamentary majority in last week's election and is now desperately seeking
the backing of the 10 MPs from Northern Ireland's ultra-conservative Democratic
Unionist Party (DUP).
EU leaders have voiced growing
impatience to start Brexit negotiations, which have already been delayed by the
parliamentary election -- and on which the clock is ticking.
An initial round of talks between May
and DUP leader Arlene Foster ended with no agreement on Tuesday, although both
sides said they were hopeful of a deal.
"The talks are continuing but I
think the events in London today probably will have some impact on that. I
think it's unlikely there will be any announcement today," a DUP spokesman
told AFP.
Media reports suggested an agreement
could be delayed into next week, but the spokesman said: "I certainly have
heard nothing on this side to indicate that."
At least six people died and dozens
were injured when a massive fire tore through a 24-storey London apartment
block overnight, a fresh blow to the capital less than two weeks after the
London Bridge terror attack.
May's office issued a statement saying
she was "deeply saddened by the tragic loss of life" but made no
mention of the talks with the DUP.
On a visit to Paris on Tuesday evening
where she met with French President Emmanuel Macron, May described the talks
with the DUP as "productive".
The talks are being closely watched in
European capitals as they could delay the expected start of Brexit negotiations
next week, as well as change Britain's entire approach to its EU withdrawal.
-
'Softer Brexit' -
May has dismissed calls to resign
following the dismal election result after calling a vote three years early in
the hope of bolstering her slim majority, only to actually lose seats.
A lacklustre campaign saw her high
approval rating slip away, and support for her "hard Brexit" strategy
-- pulling out of the European single market and customs union -- now hangs in
the balance.
Former prime minister David Cameron,
who called last year's EU referendum and resigned after losing it, told a
conference in Poland that "there will be pressure for a softer
Brexit".
Parliament now "deserves a
say", he said, adding that there was "perhaps an opportunity to
consult more widely with the other parties on how best we can achieve it".
Guy Verhofstadt, the European
Parliament's chief Brexit negotiator, warned Tuesday that "the current
uncertainty cannot continue" and on Wednesday issued five "pressing
questions" on Twitter.
Among these was whether Britain's
position would "be the same as in the letter of March 29" when May
triggered the two-year Brexit countdown.
The EU's chief Brexit negotiator
Michel Barnier also warned Tuesday that time was passing.
"It's passing quicker than anyone
believes... That's why we're ready to start very quickly. I can't negotiate
with myself," he told the Financial Times newspaper.
Barnier dismissed the suggestion of
postponing the negotiations and said such a delay would only prompt further
instability.
At a press conference with May, Macron
said the door was "always open" for Britain to remain in the EU as
long as the negotiations on Brexit have not finished.
-
'Very unsettling' -
The DUP is believed to be more
favourable to a "soft Brexit" that would keep Northern Ireland's
border with the Republic of Ireland free-flowing.
Under the proposed deal, the DUP would
likely support May's Conservatives on big issues such as the budget, Brexit and
defence legislation on a vote-by-vote-basis.
They would not form a coalition.
However, the prospect of a deal has prompted warnings that it could upset
Northern Ireland's fragile peace.
London's neutrality is key to the
delicate balance of power in Northern Ireland, which was once plagued by
violence over Britain's control of the province.
"The danger is that however much
any government tries they will not be seen to be impartial if they are locked
into a parliamentary deal," 1990s Conservative prime minister John Major
told BBC radio.
The Irish republican Sinn Fein party
-- which won seven seats in the election although their MPs traditionally do
not take up their seats in protest -- is also wary of the alliance.
"This new arrangement is very
unsettling and people are concerned and worried about what it may mean,"
Sinn Fein MP Michelle Glidernew told AFP.
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