UK rejects demand to replace officials after deadly fire
LONDON — British Prime Minister Theresa May’s government on Saturday rejected demands that she appoint commissioners to run the local council blamed for mishandling the response to the London high-rise fire, as the crisis deepened over who should be held accountable for the 80 deaths in the blaze.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan had asked May to take the unusual step because he said the elected council for the borough of Kensington and Chelsea has “lost the trust of local residents.” But installing commissioners there would place the fire tower crisis even closer to May and her Conservative party.
The council owns Grenfell Tower, a 120-apartment public housing complex that was destroyed in the June 14 fire, and is made up of 37 members of the Conservative Party, 12 from the Labour Party and one Liberal Democrat.
Council leader Nick Paget-Brown resigned Friday, saying he accepted responsibility for the “perceived failings” of the council and said its members would elect a new leader at its next meeting.


