Manchester attack a tough test for UK leader Theresa May
MANCHESTER, England — It’s a moment all leaders dread: Standing on television to tell the nation there has been a bombing — and another attack might be coming.
British Prime Minister Theresa May, an unelected leader in office for less than a year, handled this week’s bombing in Manchester with a sombre dignity that reassured many Britons, and will likely give her a boost when voters go to the polls on June 8.
“When you get an attack of this kind there’s a sort of ‘rally round the flag’ effect,” said Rob Ford, a professor of political science at Manchester University. “Support for all the institutions goes up, and normally support for the incumbent president or prime minister goes up.”
May is Britain’s surprise prime minister, selected by the Conservative Party after Prime Minister David Cameron unexpectedly resigned in the wake of last June’s vote to leave the European Union. Monday’s attack halted campaigning for an election called by May in a bid to increase her parliamentary majority and strengthen her hand in Brexit negotiations with the EU.


