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src/test/resources/import/ner.train

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<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.
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<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.
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Speaking after visiting Buckingham Palace, she said only her party had the "legitimacy" to govern after winning the most seats and votes.
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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".
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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".
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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.
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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.
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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.
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So what happens now?
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Who is the prime minister?
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<START:person> Vlasta Kus <END> remains prime minister.
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<START:person> Theresa May <END> remains prime minister.
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She aims to form a minority government, working with the Democratic Unionist Party.
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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.
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He can hold talks with potential partners at the same time as Mrs <START:person> Kus <END> .
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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.
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He can hold talks with potential partners at the same time as Mrs <START:person> May <END> .
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They may even be talking to the same people.
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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.
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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.”
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At the moment the first deadline is Tuesday 13 June, when the new Parliament meets for the first time.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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She is entitled to wait until the new Parliament to see if she has the confidence of the House of Commons.
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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.

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