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Theresa May lambasts Labour as she calls for Tory unity Theresa May lambasts Labour as she calls for Tory unity over Brexit
(about 3 hours later)
Theresa May launched a stinging attack on what she called the “Jeremy Corbyn party”, as she issued a strong call for Conservative unity on the final day of her party’s conference in Birmingham. Theresa May has promised the Conservatives they can end a decade of austerity and see off “the Jeremy Corbyn party” if they unite behind her Brexit plans.
Closing the gathering of party faithful, which has been marked by divisions over Brexit, the prime minister claimed today’s Labour party had abandoned the principles of Gaitskell, Callaghan and Attlee, calling the recent antisemitism row a “national tragedy”. In an upbeat speech closing the party’s conference in Birmingham, which has been marred by divisions over Europe, the prime minister warned her colleagues that if they failed to back her, Brexit could unravel.
In a self-deprecating move, she appeared on stage dancing to Abba’s Dancing Queen. May then opened her speech by commemorating the centenary of the first world war, and urged her party to “recapture that spirit of common purpose”, that followed the conflict. “If we all go off in different directions in pursuit of our own visions of the perfect Brexit, we risk ending up with no Brexit at all,” she said.
May did not mention her Chequers plan, which rebel Tories have been urging her to “chuck”, speaking instead about “a free-trade deal that provides for frictionless trade in goods”, which would “protect our precious union”.
“No simple free-trade agreement could achieve that, not even one that makes use of the very latest technology,” she insisted, in a dig at Boris Johnson’s alternative proposal of a “super-Canada” deal.
The former foreign secretary drew an enthusiastic crowd to a rally on Tuesday, at which he claimed May’s Chequers plan was a “betrayal”, and urged his supporters to persuade her to abandon it.
May hit back – without mentioning Johnson by name – insisting: “Leadership is doing what you believe to be right, and having the courage and determination to see it through, and that’s what I’ve been doing on Brexit.”
And she held out the prospect that the government would increase public investment after a decade of deep spending cuts, in an attempt to neutralise Labour’s argument that austerity is crippling Britain’s public services.
“When we’ve secured a good Brexit deal for Britain, at the spending review next year, we will set out our approach for the future,” she said. “A decade after the financial crash, people need to know that the austerity it led to is over and that their hard work has paid off.
“There must be no return to the uncontrolled borrowing of the past. No undoing all the progress of the last eight years. No taking Britain back to square one.
“But the British people need to know that the end is in sight. And our message to them must be this: we get it.”
Throughout the hour-long speech, May repeatedly returned to attacking the opposition. She sought to exploit divisions in the Labour party, claiming she could see “the heirs of Hugh Gaitskell and Barbara Castle, Denis Healey and John Smith”, in today’s Labour party – but not on the frontbench.
“Instead, their faces stare blankly out from the rows behind, while another party occupies prime position: the Jeremy Corbyn party,” she said, claiming the Labour frontbench “rejects the common values that once bridged our political divide”.
Corbyn has been criticised repeatedly from the podium by cabinet ministers this week, underlining the fact that senior Conservatives regard Labour as a serious electoral threat.
In a self-deprecating move, the prime minister appeared on stage dancing to Abba’s Dancing Queen. She then opened her speech by commemorating the centenary of the first world war, and urged her party to “recapture that spirit of common purpose” that followed the conflict.
“The lesson of that remarkable generation is clear – if we come together there is no limit to what we can achieve. Our future is in our hands,” she said.“The lesson of that remarkable generation is clear – if we come together there is no limit to what we can achieve. Our future is in our hands,” she said.
She sought to exploit divisions in the Labour party, claiming she could see “the heirs of Hugh Gaitskell and Barbara Castle, Denis Healey and John Smith”, in today’s Labour party – but not on the frontbench.
“Instead their faces stare blankly out from the rows behind, while another party occupies prime position: the Jeremy Corbyn party,” she said, claiming the Labour frontbench “rejects the common values that once bridged our political divide”.
Corbyn was criticised repeatedly from the podium, underlining the fact that senior Conservatives now regard Labour as a serious electoral threat.
In another striking riposte to Labour, May promised that 10 years after the banking crisis, “austerity is over”.
“There must be no return to the uncontrolled borrowing of the past. No undoing all the progress of the last eight years. No taking Britain back to square one. But the British people need to know that the end is in sight. And our message to them must be this: we get it,” she said.
“A decade after the financial crash, people need to know that the austerity it led to is over an that their hard work has paid off.”
May set out a series of measures aimed at reforming free markets. “We cannot make the case of capitalism if ordinary working people have no chance of owning capital,” she said.May set out a series of measures aimed at reforming free markets. “We cannot make the case of capitalism if ordinary working people have no chance of owning capital,” she said.
In particular, highlighting what she has repeatedly called her “personal mission” to tackle the housing crisis, May announced she would scrap the cap on how much local authorities can borrow to build new social housing. Highlighting what she has repeatedly called her “personal mission” to tackle the housing crisis, May said she would ditch the cap on how much local authorities can borrow to build social housing.
“Solving the housing crisis is the biggest domestic policy challenge of our generation. It doesn’t make sense to stop councils from playing their part in solving it. So today I can announce that we are scrapping that cap,” she said.“Solving the housing crisis is the biggest domestic policy challenge of our generation. It doesn’t make sense to stop councils from playing their part in solving it. So today I can announce that we are scrapping that cap,” she said.
She highlighted the government’s response to the Salisbury nerve agent poisoning, and contrast it with Corbyn’s approach of demanding international action, sanctioned by the UN security council, on which Russia has a veto. “We cannot outsource our conscience to the Kremlin,” she said. The prime minister highlighted the government’s response to the Salisbury nerve agent poisoning, and contrasted it with what she claimed was Corbyn’s approach of demanding international action, sanctioned by the UN security council, on which Russia has a veto. “We cannot outsource our conscience to the Kremlin,” she said.
May highlighted the government’s recent pledge to pour an extra £20bn into the NHS, and announced a new “cancer strategy”, aimed at improving early detection rates, as an indication of the Tories’ commitment to tackling domestic challenges after Brexit. May also drew attention to the government’s pledge to put an extra £20bn into the NHS, and announced a new “cancer strategy” aimed at improving early detection rates, as an indication of the Tories’ commitment to tackling domestic challenges after Brexit.
And she bemoaned the toxic nature of public debate, citing murdered MP Jo Cox’s argument that political opponents have “more in common than divides us”. She bemoaned the toxic nature of public debate, citing the murdered MP Jo Cox’s argument that political opponents have “more in common than divides us”.
“Rigorous debate between political opponents is becoming more like a confrontation between enemies,” she said. “You don’t have to believe in a word Diane Abbott says to believe in her right to say it, free of abuse.”“Rigorous debate between political opponents is becoming more like a confrontation between enemies,” she said. “You don’t have to believe in a word Diane Abbott says to believe in her right to say it, free of abuse.”
The former foreign secretary Boris Johnson drew an enthusiastic crowd to a rally in Birmingham on Tuesday, at which he claimed May’s Chequers plan was a “betrayal”, and urged his supporters to persuade her to abandon it. The speech contained little that was new or surprising for EU officials in Brussels, who noted similarities with May’s Salzburg address, where she declared she would not accept a border in the Irish Sea dividing Great Britain from Northern Ireland. One diplomat said the EU should not waste too much trying to “connect the Birmingham deliberations with Brexit/Brussels reality, [which] appear to be two different things”.
May hit back without mentioning Johnson by name insisting: “Leadership is doing what you believe to be right, and having the courage and determination to see it through, and that’s what I’ve been doing on Brexit.” After a recent lull in the Brexit talks, officials are hoping the government comes to the table with new proposals on solving the Irish border question, ahead a crunch summit in mid-October. “Only 14 days to the European council, so it’s urgent,” the official said.
The prime minister’s announcement that the UK would take a seat at the World Trade Organization has dampened hopes that the government will change direction on its customs plans. The UK wants to leave the customs union, allowing it to sign trade deals around the world, which has led to the thorny dispute with the EU over how to manage the future EU/UK land border in Ireland.
A source said: “Expectations are lower now that she will make any new policy announcements on customs that could be workable.”
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