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Dhaka Tribune

British PM May amends key campaign pledge

Update : 23 May 2017, 01:40 AM
British Prime Minister Theresa May on Monday amended an unpopular campaign proposal for elderly care just days after unveiling it, prompting accusations that she could not be relied upon in upcoming Brexit negotiations. May came under fire following a speech in Wales, where her Conservatives are hoping to make historic gains against the opposition Labour party in the June 8 general election. In the speech she announced a cap on the amount people would be asked to pay, which was in response to a backlash against proposals in her party’s manifesto on paying for elderly care. “We are proposing the right funding model for social care... We will make sure there’s an absolute limit on what people need to pay,” she told supporters in Gresford, a village in north Wales. May denied the cap amounted to a U-turn, repeating three times that “nothing has changed” when questioned by journalists on the announcement. The initial proposal did not include an upper limit, leaving it open to accusations that people could be forced to use their assets to pay for care. She did not detail how much the limit on elderly care would be. Labour said the prime minister’s change of heart had thrown her campaign into “chaos and confusion”, just four days after the Conservative Party manifesto was published. “This is weak and unstable leadership. You can’t trust the Tories – if this is how they handle their own manifesto, how will they cope with the Brexit negotiations?” said Andrew Gwynne, Labour’s election co-ordinator. Negotiations on Britain’s departure from the European Union are expected to start later in June after the general election. The former leader of the UK Independence Party, Nigel Farage, said May’s change was the second such turnaround following an earlier shift on the government’s budget plans. “U-turn on the budget and now a U-turn on the manifesto. This lady is for turning,” he wrote on Twitter, in reference to a famous phrase used by former prime minister Margaret Thatcher.
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