It's a fight by a prime minister with one foot out the door. But perhaps out of a sense of duty, and an eye on her legacy, Theresa May is picking one with China.
The U.K. has a vested interest. It handed back Hong Kong to Chinese rule in 1997 and negotiated the conditions whereby Beijing would govern the city for the next 50 years.
May waded in after weeks of violent protests in the former colony against a proposed law to allow extraditions, including to China. Her call for respect of Hong Kong's autonomy prompted a rare televised rebuke from China's ambassador.
Beijing won't need to deal with May for much longer. Instead, it will face either former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson or current Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, the final two in the contest to become Tory leader.
Hunt has warned China of unspecified "serious consequences" if it abandons the deal on Hong Kong. That's even as he has championed close ties with Beijing, especially for trade. Johnson has also backed the protesters.
With the U.K. on a tortuous path through Brexit, it will need China ready and willing to do a quick trade deal afterward. The risk is that China tensions become entangled in the U.K. leadership process, with both Hunt and Johnson pushed to take a strong stance.
- Rosalind Mathieson
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