People have seen you as never before, up close, and the question really is – if you run the Brexit negotiations as indifferently as your campaign appears to be run, they can be very worried
Afterwards, Channel 4 Political Editor Gary Gibbon pointed out how absent the Conservative leader can appear in media appearances:
Well I’m glad you caught up with her, but it sometimes feels as though you’re in a separate room.
Gibbon then branded May’s “rigid” behaviour “one of the stories of this election”.
‘Rigid’
A local paper in Plymouth had a similar experience with May to what Gibbon describes.
Plymouth Herald reporter Sam Blackledge gave a telling verdict on his interview with the incumbent Prime Minister:
Before 8.30am today, I had never interviewed a Prime Minister. Heading back to the office to transcribe my encounter with Theresa May at Plymouth’s fish market, I couldn’t be certain that had changed.
The local paper summed up the interview as “three minutes of nothing” and “without clarity, candour, or transparency”.
May’s campaign
Snow also questioned May on the failure of making her campaign about her personality:
The way you call them ‘my Brexit negotiations’ defines exactly how you’ve run this campaign – me, mine, me, Theresa May… that is perhaps one of the ways in which the campaign’s gone wrong
The Conservative leader responded with meaningless platitudes:
When we look into the Brexit negotiations, what we want is strong and stable leadership. What we want is a clear plan going into those negotiations.
On the contrary, as Snow points out, we haven’t received any resemblance of a clear plan for Brexit other than feelgood soundbites. Under immense pressure, May finally agreed to the interview with Snow. But she remains the first sitting Prime Minister in 40 years to duck a BBC Radio 2 media appearance during a general election. And on Channel 4, Snow called out a campaign beset by embarrassment.
Get Involved!
– Get out and vote on 8 June – that’s this Thursday. And encourage others to do the same.
– Discuss the key policy issues with family members, colleagues and neighbours. And organise! Join (and participate in the activities of) a union, an activist group, and/or a political party.
– See more Canary articles on the 2017 general election.
– Support The Canary if you value the work we do.
Featured image via screenshot