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Opinion

What's next for the Tory government and British Jews?

Mr Timothy was the greatest influence on Mrs May on Israel and was utterly determined to see Britain draw closer to its ally.

June 15, 2017 11:05
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4 min read

It was at 3.23am last Friday that the previously unthinkable became obvious. During her acceptance speech in her Maidenhead constituency, Theresa May said: “More than anything else, this country needs a period of stability.”

At that very moment, as she prepared to utter the word “stability” — such a regular feature of her election campaign — the Prime Minister stumbled, and it was clear: she was finished, and she knew it.

Billed as the new Iron Lady, expected just a few weeks ago to win a landslide victory, and still coming to terms with three major terrorist attacks, Mrs May began in that speech to unravel. She has hardly managed to stem the unravelling since. However hard she has worked to prove otherwise, Mrs May now faces a Herculean task to save her premiership.

Where exactly her phenomenal political miscalculation leaves us as a country and as a Jewish community remains to be seen. There seems little point in making predictions at this stage. The election campaign has made obvious the fallacy that any of us truly knows what is going on in politics at the moment. Take for example my belief last week that the Conservatives “will win comfortably, finishing with a majority of around 40 seats or more”.

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