Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Theresa May invokes post-Brexit trade with India to win votes

Prime minister Theresa May today (1) said talks on post-Brexit trade ties with countries like India, Australia and New Zealand are already underway as she tried to woo voters ahead of the June 8 general election.

The Conservative party leader is in a fight-back mode as latest opinion polls showed Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn narrowing the gap between the two parties to just three points, with some even suggesting the likelihood of a hung Parliament.


"If we get Brexit right, I am confident that that future will be bright. As we pursue a bold and ambitious free trade agreement between the UK and the European Union, and as we get out into the world to do new trade deals with old friends and new allies around the globe, the opportunities for our economy will be great," she said.

May's reaction has been to shift the focus back to Brexit and away from domestic issues, which have dominated the headlines in recent days.

"We have already started discussions on future trade ties with countries like Australia, New Zealand and India. While countries including China, Brazil, the US and the Gulf States have expressed their interest in striking trade deals with us as soon as they can," the Conservative Party leader said.

With just one week to go to the polls, May has come under fire for her refusal to join a live television debate on Wednesday and used her campaign speech in Teeside in the north-east of England today to try and win back some of the lost ground.

She sought to raise the spectre of a hung Parliament that could require the Labour party to stitch up an alliance with the Scottish National Party (SNP), among other smaller parties.

She said: "He [Corbyn] doesn't believe in Britain. He doesn't have a plan. He doesn't have what it takes. And after last night [Wednesdays TV debate] its clearer than ever that just 11 days after the election when the negotiations begin, Jeremy Corbyn's focus wouldn't be on trying to negotiate a deal for Britain in Europe, but on trying to stitch up a deal with [SNP leader] Nicola Sturgeon and the rest".

Her speech came as a YouGov poll for The Times puts her ruling Tory party on 42 per cent, down one point since the end of last week, with Labour up three on 39 per cent and the Liberal Democrats down two points on 7 per cent, at par with the far-right, anti-EU UK Independence Party (UKIP).

"How dare you call a General Election then run away from the debate," Leader of the Liberal Democrats Tim Farron said during Wednesday's TV debate, where May sent UK Home Secretary Amber Rudd to stand in for her.

May had announced early on that she did not intend to attend any of the televised debates and would be focussing on door-to-door campaigning. However, her failure to attend has faced widespread criticism.

"Over the next seven days, I will fight to earn every vote in this election. Because every vote will count to strengthen my hand in the Brexit negotiations. And every vote will be a step towards that brighter future that we can build beyond Brexit together. That is why I will be campaigning in all corners of this country in the week ahead. And why I will be reaching out to everyone, in every community," she said in a speech, in an apparent reference to her television no-show.

Despite having repeatedly said that she intended to follow the UK's Fixed Term Parliament that would have seen the next general election held in 2020, May had called a snap poll in order to win a strong mandate for negotiations over Britains exit from the European Union (EU).

The Opposition Labour party, which was against Brexit but has accepted the June 2016 referendum result, has said its Brexit focus would be to fight to protect workers rights, environmental protections and access to the single market for UK business in Brexit talks. The Liberal Democrats are also focusing on Brexit, warning of serious staff shortages in the state-funded National Health Service (NHS) caused by EU nationals leaving the UK.

More For You

Grace O’Malley-Kumar

A medical student aiming to become a doctor like her parents, Grace was also a keen sportsperson who represented England at under-18 level in hockey and played cricket. (Photo credit: X/@SouthgateHC)

X/@SouthgateHC

Grace O’Malley-Kumar honoured with George Medal for courage in Nottingham knife attack

GRACE O’MALLEY-KUMAR, the British-Indian teenager who was stabbed to death while trying to protect her friend during a knife attack in Nottingham in 2023, has been posthumously awarded the George Medal, one of Britain’s highest civilian honours for acts of bravery.

Grace, aged 19, was walking back to her University of Nottingham accommodation with her friend Barnaby Webber, also 19, when they were attacked by knife-wielding Valdo Calocane in June 2023. Both students were killed. Calocane was later sentenced to a mental health order and detained in a high-security hospital.

Keep ReadingShow less
konkan25

The UK's Carrier Strike Group (CSG), led by aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales, has been deployed for the exercise, which aims to enhance combined maritime and air capabilities between the two navies.

X/@COMUKCSG

India and UK navies begin eight-day Exercise Konkan in Indian Ocean

INDIA and the United Kingdom have begun an eight-day joint naval exercise, Exercise Konkan, in the Western Indian Ocean as part of efforts to strengthen overall military cooperation.

The UK's Carrier Strike Group (CSG), led by aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales, has been deployed for the exercise, which aims to enhance combined maritime and air capabilities between the two navies.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robert Jenrick

Robert Jenrick, takes part in a TV interview on day three of the Conservative Party conference on October 7, 2025 in Manchester. (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

Jenrick says he has no regrets over comments on Handsworth integration

Highlights:

  • Robert Jenrick stands by remarks calling Handsworth “one of the worst-integrated places”
  • Kemi Badenoch says Jenrick may have been “making an observation”
  • Local MP Ayoub Khan and former mayor Andy Street strongly criticise remarks

SHADOW JUSTICE SECRETARY Robert Jenrick has defended his comments describing Birmingham’s Handsworth area as “one of the worst-integrated places” he had ever been to.

Keep ReadingShow less
starmer

Starmer said regular pro-Palestinian protests had been used by some as a "despicable excuse to attack British Jews for something over which they have absolutely no responsibility". (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

Starmer condemns pro-Palestinian protests on Oct 7 anniversary

Highlights:

  • Starmer urges students not to join pro-Palestinian protests planned for Tuesday.
  • Jewish Bloc for Palestine accuses government of “weaponising fear and grief”.
  • Manchester synagogue attack left two people dead on Thursday.
  • Protests and vigils planned across multiple UK cities.

PRIME MINISTER Keir Starmer has called on students not to take part in pro-Palestinian protests planned on Tuesday to mark the second anniversary of Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack in Israel, saying they were disrespectful.

Keep ReadingShow less
Adarsh Kumar

Born in Champaran in the north Indian state of Bihar, Kumar was raised by a single mother who cleaned homes to fund his education.

Indian teen wins global student prize

AN INDIAN teenage entrepreneur who launched a programme to help underprivileged students access better education opportunities has won a prestigious global prize.

Adarsh Kumar, an 18-year-old student-innovator who grew up in poverty, was on Wednesday (1) named the winner of the $100,000 (£74,471) Chegg.org Global Student Prize 2025 at a ceremony in London.

Keep ReadingShow less