Theresa May strikes deal with Northern Irish DUP to back minority government
June 26, 2017 05:00 pm
British Prime Minister Theresa May has struck a deal to prop up her minority government with the support of a small Northern Irish Protestant party.
After Ms May lost her majority in Parliament on June 8 with a failed gamble on a snap election, she tried to secure the backing of the small Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) and its 10 politicians, though talks dragged on for more than two weeks.
Ms May and DUP leader Arlene Foster presided at the signing of a deal at Downing Street on Monday.
They smiled and joked as negotiators from both sides, the DUP’s Jeffrey Donaldson and the Conservatives’ Gavin Williamson, signed the deal.
The deal will allow Ms May to pass legislation with the backing of the DUP in the 650-seat Parliament, and stay in power as she attempts to negotiate Britain’s exit from the European Union.
But Ms May’s position remains insecure. Her Brexit strategy is under scrutiny and her future as Prime Minister is the subject of public debate.
Some senior Conservatives have voiced unease at a deal with the DUP, saying it could put at risk the 1998 peace settlement in Northern Ireland, known as the Good Friday Agreement.
Ms Foster said a deal with Ms May could help drive a second deal on power-sharing in the province.
-ABC
-Agencies