Theresa May is weak and wobbly, not strong and stable. That doesn’t bode well for our Brexit talks. Here are her seven of her top flip-flops.
Dementia tax
In her manifesto, the prime minister promised to put elderly care on a “strong and stable footing” by scrapping David Cameron’s plan for a cap on how much people would have to pay if they couldn’t look after themselves. Only four days later, after the opposition branded her policy a “dementia tax”, May said the cap was back. She had the nerve to tell the BBC she hadn’t changed her mind.
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Snap election
Time and again, the prime minister said she wouldn’t call an early election. For example, she told the BBC on Sept. 4: “I am not going to be calling a snap election”, giving the need for a “period of stability” as the reason. And yet on April 14, she called a snap election, giving the need for stability as the reason.
Taxing white van man
In March’s Budget, the government announced plans to put up National Insurance rates for the self-employed, breaking a pledge in the Tories’ 2015 manifesto not to increase National Insurance. After howls of protest from the Tory back benches, the tax hike was scrapped.
At the Tory party conference last October, the government unveiled proposals to force companies to reveal how many foreigners they employ in order to shame bosses who fail to hire Brits. After an outcry, the idea was abandoned.
Trump’s Muslim ban
May was so keen to curry favour with Donald Trump that she refused to condemn his plan to ban citizens of seven mostly-Muslim countries from coming to America – a policy liable to inflame extremist Muslim sentiment across the world. After a global outcry, she flip-flopped and said she didn’t agree with it.
Workers on boards
When May launched her campaign to become Tory leader last July she promised that employees would be represented on company boards. The business community was aghast. Come the manifesto, the pledge has been diluted. Companies merely need to ensure a specific director has “responsibility for employee representation”.
Quit EU or ECHR?
During the referendum, May campaigned to quit the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). She was, however, in favour of staying in the EU. After the referendum, in her bid to become Tory leader, she did a total volte-face: backing membership of the ECHR but becoming the country’s arch-Brexiter with her “Brexit means Brexit” mantra.
When our EU partners look at this flip-flopping, what will they conclude? Will they view her as a strong leader who will hold her ground in the coming Brexit negotiations – or as somebody who will cave if they push hard enough?
People have compared May to Margaret Thatcher, our first female prime minister. One of Thatcher’s most famous phrases was: “You turn if you want to. The lady is not for turning.” The same cannot be said of her successor.
Edited by Luke Lythgoe
May’s early lack of preparing the ground for positive appreciation of the points of view of both parties involved, wholeheartedly assisted by Boris Johnson and David Davis, have done more harm than her wobbliness here in Britain. Her appreciation of Britain’s resulting disadvantaged position is the main driver of her hard Brexit programme. There is no longer another choice.
Will May actually be involved in the Brexit talks? It does not look anywhere near as certain as it did ten weeks ago.
Haven’t you missed their immigration non-target?
Oh, and the fact she supported Remain?
They have kept the unpopular jeannie locked in a bottle, Jeremy Hunt with the doctors’ strike firmly and securely locked up and ‘shut ‘ upped. Boris Johnson the clever ditherer also carricatured by being set up to look dump is anything but he is not dumb. So who will lead Brexit.
Theresa a closet REMAINER cannot be trusted. An opportunist politician and no convictions does anything for votes.