#GE2017 - a disastrous night for Theresa May

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May speaks during a General Election campaign visit. Picture: Stefan Rousseau/PA via AP

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May speaks during a General Election campaign visit. Picture: Stefan Rousseau/PA via AP

Published Jun 9, 2017

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London - Prime Minister Theresa May faced

calls to quit on Friday after her election gamble to win a

stronger mandate backfired, throwing British politics into

turmoil and potentially delaying the start of Brexit

negotiations.

With no clear winner likely to emerge from Thursday's vote,

a wounded May vowed to provide stability, while her Labour rival

Jeremy Corbyn said she should step down.

An updated BBC forecast predicted May's Conservatives would

win 318 of the 650 House of Commons seats, eight short of a

majority, while the left-wing opposition Labour Party would take

267 - producing a "hung parliament" and potential deadlock.

Sky News also predicted May would lose her majority, scoring

somewhere between 315 and 325 seats.

With talks of unprecedented complexity on Britain's

departure from the European Union due to start in just 10 days'

time, there was uncertainty over who would form the next

government and over the fundamental direction Brexit would take.

"At this time, more than anything else this country needs a

period of stability," a grim-faced May said after winning her

own parliamentary seat of Maidenhead in southeast England.

"If ... the Conservative Party has won the most seats and

probably the most votes then it will be incumbent on us to

ensure that we have that period of stability and that is exactly

what we will do."

After winning his own seat in north London, Corbyn said

May's attempt to win a bigger mandate had backfired.

"The mandate she's got is lost Conservative seats, lost

votes, lost support and lost confidence," he said.

"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."

May had unexpectedly called the snap election seven weeks

ago, confident of sharply increasing the slim majority she had

inherited from predecessor David Cameron before launching into

the Brexit talks.

Instead, she risked an ignominious exit after just 11 months

at Number 10 Downing Street, which would be the shortest tenure

of any prime minister for almost a century.

"Whatever happens, Theresa May is toast," said Nigel Farage,

former leader of the anti-EU party UKIP.

May had spent the campaign denouncing Corbyn as the weak

leader of a spendthrift party that would crash Britain's economy

and flounder in Brexit talks, while she would provide "strong

and stable leadership" to clinch a good deal for Britain.

But her campaign unravelled after a major policy u-turn on

care for the elderly, while Corbyn's old-school socialist

platform and more impassioned campaigning style won wider

support than anyone had foreseen.

Sterling fell by more than two cents against the U.S. dollar

after an exit poll showed May losing her majority.

"A hung parliament is the worst outcome from a markets

perspective as it creates another layer of uncertainty ahead of

the Brexit negotiations and chips away at what is already a

short timeline to secure a deal for Britain," said Craig Erlam,

an analyst with brokerage Oanda in London.

In Scotland, the pro-independence Scottish National Party

suffered major setbacks. Having won all but three of Scotland's

59 seats in the British parliament in 2015, their share of the

vote fell sharply and they lost seats to the Conservatives,

Labour and the Liberal Democrats.

The SNP's leader in the British parliament, Angus Robertson,

was among those who lost their seats.

The centre-left, pro-EU Lib Dems were having a mixed night.

Their former leader, Nick Clegg, who was deputy prime minister

from 2010 to 2015, lost his seat. But former business minister

Vince Cable won his back, and party leader Tim Farron held on.

With the smaller parties more closely aligned with Labour

than with the Conservatives, the prospect of Corbyn becoming

prime minister no longer seems fanciful.

That would make the course of Brexit even harder to predict.

During his three decades on Labour's leftist fringe, Corbyn

consistently opposed European integration and denounced the EU

as a corporate, capitalist body.

As party leader, he unenthusiastically campaigned for

Britain to remain in the bloc, but has said that Labour would

deliver Brexit if in power. The party has not given a detailed

plan for Brexit but has said its priorities would be to maintain

the benefits of both the EU single market and its customs union.

"As a Brexiteer who believes in it with all his heart and

soul, my fear is that Corbyn forms a coalition with the SNP and

a few Lib Dems and we look down the barrels of a second

referendum in a few years' time," said Farage.

In domestic policy, Labour proposes raising taxes for the

richest 5 percent of Britons, scrapping university tuition fees,

investing 250 billion pounds ($315 billion) in infrastructure

plans and re-nationalising the railways and postal service.

Early results were in line with the exit poll, with Labour

doing better than expected. That was in part because votes that

had previously gone to UKIP were splitting evenly between the

two major parties instead of going overwhelmingly to the

Conservatives as pundits had expected.

“UKIP voters wanted Brexit but they also want change,"

Farage said.

"They are fundamentally anti-establishment in their

attitudes and the vicar’s daughter (May) is very

pro-establishment. And I think she came across in the campaign

as not only as wooden and robotic but actually pretty

insincere."

Reuters

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