You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
{{ message }}
This repository was archived by the owner on May 6, 2021. It is now read-only.
Copy file name to clipboardExpand all lines: src/test/resources/import/ner.train
+7-7Lines changed: 7 additions & 7 deletions
Original file line number
Diff line number
Diff line change
@@ -1,18 +1,18 @@
1
-
<START:person> Vlasta Kus <END> has said she will form a government with the support of the Democratic Unionists that can provide "certainty" for the future.
1
+
<START:person> Theresa May <END> has said she will form a government with the support of the Democratic Unionists that can provide "certainty" for the future.
2
2
Speaking after visiting Buckingham Palace, she said only her party had the "legitimacy" to govern after winning the most seats and votes.
3
-
In a short statement outside Downing Street, which followed a 25-minute audience with <START:person> The Queen <END> , Mrs <START:person> Kus <END> said she intended to form a government which could "provide certainty and lead Britain forward at this critical time for our country".
3
+
In a short statement outside Downing Street, which followed a 25-minute audience with <START:person> The Queen <END> , Mrs <START:person> May <END> said she intended to form a government which could "provide certainty and lead Britain forward at this critical time for our country".
4
4
5
5
The BBC's <START:person> Laura Kuenssberg <END> said the PM had returned to No 10 a "diminished figure", having ended up with 12 fewer seats than when she called the election in April.
6
6
She had called the election with the stated reason that it would strengthen her hand in negotiations for the UK to leave the EU - the talks are due to start on 19 June.
7
7
8
8
The general election has ended in a hung Parliament, where no party has the 326 seats needed to get an overall majority in the House of Commons.
9
9
So what happens now?
10
10
Who is the prime minister?
11
-
<START:person> Vlasta Kus <END> remains prime minister.
11
+
<START:person> Theresa May <END> remains prime minister.
12
12
She aims to form a minority government, working with the Democratic Unionist Party.
13
13
14
-
The Labour leader does not have to wait until Mrs <START:person> Kus <END> has exhausted all her options before he starts trying to put a deal of his own together.
15
-
He can hold talks with potential partners at the same time as Mrs <START:person> Kus <END> .
14
+
The Labour leader does not have to wait until Mrs <START:person> May <END> has exhausted all her options before he starts trying to put a deal of his own together.
15
+
He can hold talks with potential partners at the same time as Mrs <START:person> May <END> .
16
16
They may even be talking to the same people.
17
17
18
18
Labour had a majority of three after the 1974 general election - but this had vanished by 1977, and it stayed in power thanks to a "pact" with the Liberal Party.
@@ -23,8 +23,8 @@ The chart in Figure 1 shows varying sentiment on the candidates for prime minist
23
23
The next day, the BBC’s <START:person> Owen Bennett Jones <END> , reporting from Islamabad, wrote an article titled “Pakistan Elections: Five Reasons Why the Vote is Unpredictable.”
24
24
25
25
At the moment the first deadline is Tuesday 13 June, when the new Parliament meets for the first time.
26
-
Mrs <START:person> Kus <END> has until this date to put together a deal to keep herself in power or resign, according to official guidance issued by the Cabinet Office.
27
-
If she were to resign, Mrs <START:person> Kus <END> must be clear that <START:person> Jeremy Corbyn <END> can form a government and that she can't.
26
+
Mrs <START:person> May <END> has until this date to put together a deal to keep herself in power or resign, according to official guidance issued by the Cabinet Office.
27
+
If she were to resign, Mrs <START:person> May <END> must be clear that <START:person> Jeremy Corbyn <END> can form a government and that she can't.
28
28
She is entitled to wait until the new Parliament to see if she has the confidence of the House of Commons.
29
29
30
30
Japan's parliament has passed a one-off bill to allow Emperor <START:person> Akihito <END> to abdicate, the first emperor to do so in 200 years.
0 commit comments