Comedian hands unemployment form to British PM Theresa May during nightmare speech

spaminator

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Comedian hands unemployment form to British PM Theresa May during nightmare speech
Jill Lawless, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, October 04, 2017 10:50 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, October 04, 2017 11:48 AM EDT
MANCHESTER, England — Embattled British Prime Minister Theresa May promised to restore the “British Dream” Wednesday, in a nightmare speech that saw her plagued by a cough and interrupted by a prankster, while parts of the backdrop fell down as she was speaking.
In a mishap-prone Conservative Party conference address, May vowed economic help for struggling families for whom “the British Dream that has inspired generations of Britons feels increasingly out of reach.”
But a speech intended to strengthen her tenuous grasp on leadership was chaotically interrupted by a comedian who handed May an unemployment form. The party said it was reviewing security after the breach.
It was a shambolic end to a troubled convention. The Conservatives are in a sour mood after June’s snap election — called three years early in hopes of bolstering the party’s majority in Parliament — saw May’s government reduced to a minority administration. The poor result has left May weakened and struggling to unite a government divided over Brexit and other issues.
May needed a strong speech to help fight off rivals to her job, including ambitious Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson.
But things did not go to plan. May struggled with a cough and a hoarse voice that forced her to pause repeatedly.
Midway through the speech a prankster walked up and handed May a P45 — the form given to people being laid off in Britain.
As he was bundled away by security, the joker — identified in media reports as comedian Simon Brodkin — said “Boris told me to do it.”
May’s office said there would be a thorough investigation. Police said the man, who was briefly detained “to prevent a breach of the peace,” had legitimate accreditation for the high-security conference.
Brodkin, whose stage name is Lee Nelson, has pulled off other high-profile stunts including showering international soccer federation president Sepp Blatter with money during a 2015 press conference.
As May neared the end of her televised speech, two letters fell off the slogan on the wall behind her — “Building a country that works for everyone.”
When she finished, May was embraced onstage by her husband Philip, as Lenny Kravitz’s “Are You Gonna Go My Way?” rang out in the auditorium.
The prime minister later tried to make light of her vocal difficulties, tweeting a picture of the speech surrounded by cough medicine and lozenges, with the word “coughs.”
But the speech did not resolve doubts about May’s future. Her struggle to speak could be seen as a symbol of her vulnerability — or of her steely determination to carry on.
Senior Tories rallied to support her. Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson tweeted that “if ever the PM needed a metaphor for service and duty and resolution through adversity, that battling performance was it!”
Others said the speech humanized a politician whose wooden campaigning style has seen her dubbed the “Maybot.”
“She completely turned around that tone of the general election,” said Conservative lawmaker George Freeman.
May fought back against “Maybot” claims in her speech, saying passion for social justice “burns inside me” and highlighting her work against racism, modern slavery and child sexual abuse.
She even made a rare personal reference, saying “it has always been a great sadness for me and Philip that we were not blessed with children.”
The unscripted mayhem overshadowed a substantial speech in which May appealed to middle- and lower-income voters. She promised to put a price cap on energy bills and get government back into the business of building public housing, a role it has largely abandoned since the 1980s, “to help fix our broken housing market.”
Undersupply and rising prices have made home ownership an elusive goal for many Britons.
May took responsibility for the Conservative election failure, saying “I led the campaign, and I am sorry.”
Then she tried to move on, telling ministers to “shape up” and focus on “the daily lives of ordinary working people.”
And she called for a more humane politics, saying “people are fed up with the game-playing, the name-calling.”
She vowed to work for an inclusive, open Britain, seeking to allay fears that the country will become more insular after it leaves the European Union.
She told EU citizens living in Britain “we want you to stay,” and said that after Brexit, the country would not be one retreating behind borders, but “a global Britain that stands tall in the world.”
May said the government wants divorce talks with the bloc to end in a good deal, but is “prepared in the event that they do not.”
May’s speech was also overshadowed by furor over Johnson’s comment during a meeting at the conference that the Libyan city of Sirte could become a tourism hub once they “clear the dead bodies away.”
Conservative lawmakers condemned the remarks as crass and tasteless, and several called for Johnson to be fired.
Comedian Simon Brodkin, also known as Lee Nelson confronts British Prime Minister Theresa May during her keynote speech, during the Conservative Party Conference at the Manchester Central Convention Complex in Manchester, England, Wednesday Oct. 4, 2017. (Peter Byrne/PA via AP)


http://twitter.com/i/videos/tweet/915588786901438464
Comedian hands unemployment form to British PM Theresa May during nightmare spee
 

Blackleaf

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Embattled British Prime Minister Theresa May promised to restore the “British Dream” Wednesday, in a nightmare speech that saw her plagued by a cough and interrupted by a prankster, while parts of the backdrop fell down as she was speaking.
Silly woman should have made sure she didn't have a cold right at the time the Conservative Pary Conference was taking place and she should have used better glue when she stuck the wording up on the backdrop.
 

Curious Cdn

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Silly woman should have made sure she didn't have a cold right at the time the Conservative Pary Conference was taking place and she should have used better glue when she stuck the wording up on the backdrop.

She could have had someone else make the speech for her. It wouldn't have been the first time that she used a surrogate to deliver important information.
 

Danbones

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Yes the brits have such timely health care
she should have gone to see a witch instead for a cure..

Oh wait, she can't, they burned them all down during the last global cooling incident...
just before the french revolution...
the colder it got the more witches they burnt
 

Blackleaf

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She could have had someone else make the speech for her. It wouldn't have been the first time that she used a surrogate to deliver important information.

The party leader makes the party leader's speech at party conferences.

The British media have sunk to new lows on blaming a cold and falling signage lettering onto a woman who was to blame for neither.
 

Danbones

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Good thing for the famous British stiff upper lip...
:)
Keeps the shot out of the pie hole...a mustache might have been helpful.

lol, come to think of it, if she had a mustache, all the other stuff might have gone unnoticed
 

Blackleaf

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Good thing for the famous British stiff upper lip...
:)
Keeps the shot out of the pie hole...a mustache might have been helpful.

lol, come to think of it, if she had a mustache, all the other stuff might have gone unnoticed

I also think she handled the lame, unfunny P45 thing very well.

By the way, a new poll shows a surge in support for the Tories and that May is still more popular than Corbyn.

Voters still prefer Theresa May as Prime Minister over Jeremy Corbyn despite her Tory conference meltdown, according to a poll today.

Research by YouGov for the Times found 36 per cent of the public thought Mrs May made the best PM - compared to 33 per cent for the Labour leader.

Perhaps in a sign of dissatisfaction with the options on offer, nearly a third did not know who they favoured.

Although the gap has narrowed to three points from eight last month, the findings will be a welcome boost to Downing Street in the wake of a dreadful week and as the Brexit negotiations enter their trickiest stage.


Research by YouGov for the Times found 36 per cent of the public thought Mrs May made the best PM - compared to 33 per cent for the Labour leader


Mrs May, on a visit in her constituency today, insisted she has the 'full support' of the Cabinet

Mrs May is struggling to contain the Tory civil war that reignited following her nightmare speech in Manchester, during which she was confronted with a fake P45 by a prankster, lost her voice due to a sore throat, and endured the set collapsing around her.

Former party chairman Grant Shapps has gone public with a plot to oust Mrs May, claiming that 'one or two' members of her own team privately want her to go.

But Mr Shapps admitted his coup attempt was still well short of the 48 names needed to force a contest for the top job.

And he was brutally lampooned by Conservative MPs, who branded him 'embittered', a 'used car salesman' and said he spoke for 'no-one'.

One backbencher accused Remainers of making a 'pathetic' bid to regain control of the party, and said of the idea he had 30 supporters: 'Diane Abbott must be doing the adding up.'

For her part, Mrs May insisted she has the 'full support' of the Cabinet today and pledged to provide 'calm leadership'.

The poll, carried out on Wednesday and Thursday, largely after the speech, suggests that Mrs May evoked more sympathy than disdain for her hapless showing.


The research also found the main parties were effectively neck and neck in voting intention, despite an incredibly turbulent run for the government since the election


Read more: Voters STILL prefer Theresa May as PM over Jeremy Corbyn | Daily Mail Online
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