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Queen's Speech may be delayed amid post-election turmoil

The Prime Minister must hammer out a new agenda under pressure from cabinet rivals, angry Tory MPs and the DUP

Joe Watts
Political Editor
Monday 12 June 2017 08:29 EDT
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Election fallout: Queen's speech could be delayed

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Downing Street has signalled the Queen's Speech may be delayed, as Theresa May attempts to get her plan for government in order after her humiliating election performance.

The State Opening of Parliament had been pencilled in for Monday June 19, but Ms May's official spokesman said an update on timings was expected today.

Any move to delay the passing of her legislative programme through the Commons, comes as she is still scrambling to secure a deal with the Northern Irish DUP, without whose support she has no majority in the Chamber.

The issue took a farcical twist, when it emerged that additional delay may be caused the Queen's Speech having to be written on goatskin parchment paper, which requires several days for the ink to dry.

After Ms May failed to secure enough seats in the election, key Tory figures have admitted the manifesto on which the party stood will have to be altered. Brexit Secretary David Davis said this morning it would likely be "pruned".

In a briefing the Prime Minister's official spokesman declined to confirm that the Queen's Speech would still be held on June 19 as previously announced, saying that Leader of the Commons Andrea Leadsom will soon be releasing a statement on the date.

First Secretary of State Damian Green confirmed there could be a delay while agreement is sought with the DUP, saying: "Obviously until we have that we can't agree the final details of the Queen's Speech."

Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson and Chancellor Philip Hammond have both stressed the need to put the economy, as opposed to immigration, first in Brexit negotiations.

Members of the parliamentary party are also demanding Ms May revisit her approach to Brexit. She will face the wrath of backbenchers at a crunch meeting on Monday afternoon, at which her MPs want her to show contrition for her woeful election campaign and tell them how she will change her leadership style.

DUP leader Arlene Foster is due in Downing Street on Tuesday, when the Prime Minister will seek to hammer out what the unionist party wants in return for supporting the Government's programme.

Mr Davis said the position the Government is in means it is expected that "some elements of the manifesto will be pruned away" as Ms May sets out her new agenda.

Plans to drop the triple lock on pensions and introduce means-testing for the winter fuel allowance are likely to be ditched as they face opposition from the DUP.

Ms May could also avoid time-consuming divisive issues such as a vote on repealing the fox hunting ban. The Prime Minister's pet project of introducing a new wave of grammar schools, which has provoked anger among some of her own backbenchers, may also fall by the wayside.

A Labour spokesman said: "Number 10's failure to confirm the date of the Queen's Speech shows that this Government is in chaos as it struggles to agree a backroom deal with a party with abhorrent views on LGBT and women's rights."

Every Queen's Speech is written on goatskin parchment paper, does not contain any goatskin but is high-quality archival paper guaranteed to last for at least 500 years.

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