New British Prime Minister Boris Johnson
will set out his domestic agenda in a speech in Manchester on Saturday,
after trying to dampen speculation he could call an early election.
Johnson will focus on health, education and infrastructure, after EU
leaders rebuffed his calls to renegotiate the Brexit deal struck by his
predecessor Theresa May last year.
The former mayor of London, who only took charge on Wednesday, has
promised to take Britain out of the EU by the latest deadline of October
31 -- deal or no deal.
But he has focused on domestic priorities in his first few days in
office, including a pledge on Friday to reverse drastic cuts to the
police force made under May.
Commentators have speculated that he could be preparing to call a
general election, hoping to regain the Conservative majority that May
lost at the polls in 2017.
Johnson on Friday "absolutely" ruled out initiating such a poll before Britain leaves the bloc.
"The British people voted in 2015, in 2016, in 2017," he said during a visit to the central English city of Birmingham.
"What they want us to do is deliver on their mandate, come out of the EU on October 31.
"They don't want another electoral event, they don't want a referendum, they don't want a general election."
However, Britons could be headed to the polls if MPs bring down
Johnson's new government in a no confidence vote in order to try and
prevent a no-deal Brexit from happening.
Britain voted 52 percent in favour of leaving the European Union in a
shock 2016 referendum that partially reflected deep resentment over
economic inequality.
Johnson on Saturday will "set out his vision to rebalance power, growth
and productivity across the UK," according to remarks released by
Downing Street before the speech.
May also come to power promising to fight Britain's "burning injustices"
but her domestic agenda was overwhelmed by Brexit negotiations and her
failed attempts to persuade parliament to vote in favour of her exit
deal.
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