Britain will start EU divorce ‘when we’re ready’ — new PM’s ally
London: British Prime Minister David Cameron chaired a farewell Cabinet meeting Tuesday, a day before handing over power to his successor following the historic vote to leave the European Union.
Ministers gathered for the final session a day after Home Secretary Theresa May was confirmed as the new Conservative leader and prime minister-in-waiting — and as a moving van arrived in Downing St. ahead of Cameron’s departure on Wednesday.
Culture Secretary John Whittingdale said there had been a “touch of sadness” to the meeting, which saw May and Treasury chief George Osborne led tributes to Cameron.
Cameron resigned after Britons voted June 23 — against his advice — to leave the EU. May will have to deal with the political fallout and oversee the complex process of separating from the bloc.
She will spend the day considering the make-up of her own Cabinet before she moves into 10 Downing St. on Wednesday.
May supported remaining in the EU, but has promised to give prominent “leave” campaigners key Cabinet roles in a bid to heal the party’s long-standing split over Europe.
May is already facing pressure from the 27 remaining EU countries to invoke Article 50 of the bloc’s constitution, which sets the clock ticking on two years of formal exit talks. She has not said when she plans to do it.
But May’s ally Chris Grayling appeared to dampen any hopes among Britain’s EU partners that her rapid ascent might accelerate the process of moving ahead with the split and resolving the uncertainty hanging over the 28-nation bloc.
Grayling, the Leader of the House of Commons, said there was no hurry to invoke Article 50.
“I think Article 50 should be triggered when we’re ready.
The most important thing right now is we do what’s in our national interest,” Grayling told Sky News.
“We get ourselves ready for the negotiation, we decide what kind of relationship we want to negotiate, and then we move ahead and trigger Article 50. We’ll do it right, we’ll do it in a proper way, we’ll do it when we’re ready.”
She is also facing calls from opposition politicians to call an early election, before the next scheduled vote in 2020.
May might be tempted to go to the polls to confirm her own mandate, and because the main opposition Labour Party is in the midst of a leadership struggle that puts it in a weak position.
Leader Jeremy Corbyn has lost the support of most Labour members of Parliament and is facing a challenge from legislator Angela Eagle.
The party’s governing National Executive Committee is meeting Tuesday to rule on whether Corbyn should automatically be on the ballot in a leadership contest, or whether he needs to gather nominations from 51 lawmakers — something he would struggle to do.
Corbyn is likely to mount a legal challenge if the decision goes against him.
Left-winger Corbyn has a strong base of support among grass roots Labour members and some trade union leaders.
Len McCluskey, general-secretary of the Unite union, called Eagle’s challenge a “coup” and said it would be a “sordid little fix” to exclude Corbyn from the ballot paper.
The leadership battle has turned bitter, and risks splitting the century-old party in two. Police said Tuesday they were investigating reports that a brick had been thrown through the window of Eagle’s constituency office in northwest England.
Corbyn said the attack on Eagle’s office and abuse directed at other lawmakers was “extremely concerning.” Last month Labour legislator Jo Cox was shot and stabbed to death in her northern England constituency, the first lawmaker to be killed in a quarter of a century.
“As someone who has also received death threats this week and previously, I am calling on all Labour Party members and supporters to act with calm and treat each other with respect and dignity, even where there is disagreement,” Corbyn said.
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