Britain woke up to a new political era Wednesday with the first coalition government since World War II _ an unlikely marriage between the Conservative Party and the left-leaning Liberal Democrats.
With a handshake, smiles and waves, the Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron welcomed his new coalition partner, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, outside the shiny black door at 10 Downing Street and set off on the business of running the country. Cameras flashed.
The alliance was necessary because no party won a majority of parliamentary seats in last week's national vote. Britons struggling to make ends meet during a punishing recession have been enraged at politicians of all stripes after a damaging lawmakers' expense scandal last year.
The government will immediately begin tackling Britain's record 153 billion-pound ($236 billion) deficit. It is still unclear whether the Liberal Democrats will back the Conservatives' plan to begin immediate spending cuts _ a punishing course of action that isn't likely to win praise from the electorate.
One of the first calls of congratulation to the new prime minister came from President Barack Obama, an acknowledgment of Britain's most important bilateral relationship. Obama invited Cameron to visit Washington this summer.
The 43-year-old Cameron became Britain's youngest prime minister in almost 200 years _ the last was Lord Liverpool at 42 in 1812 _ after cementing a coalition deal with the third-place Liberal Democrats. Clegg and four other Liberal Democrats received Cabinet posts. A number of other Liberal Democrats would receive junior posts.
Both Cameron and Clegg have acknowledged that Labour _ in power for the last 13 years _ was too closely tied to Washington's interests. Both men back the Afghanistan mission, but Cameron hopes to withdraw British troops within five years. Clegg has said he's uneasy at a rising death toll. Leaner coffers may also mean less money to enter foreign-led military operations.
Relations with European neighbors could also become problematic. Cameron's party is deeply skeptical over cooperation in Europe and has withdrawn from an alliance with the parties of Germany's Angela Merkel and France's Nicolas Sarkozy. Clegg, once a member of the European parliament, has long been pro-European.
Once described as sandal-wearing hippie academics, Clegg's Liberal Democrats emerge from the political fringe to the top rung of government. Among the most visible will be Vince Cable, who will take an as yet unspecified post in charge of Britain's banks, the BBC reported.
Labour, meanwhile, took steps to regroup, with the maneuvering under way for the job of party leader after former Prime Minister Gordon Brown resigned Tuesday. David Miliband, the former foreign secretary, has emerged as a top candidate and has earned the backing of another early favorite, former Home Secretary Alan Johnson.
Brown's deputy Harriet Harman is interim Labour leader until a formal leadership vote takes place.
The agreement between the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats, reached over five tense days of negotiation, delivered Britain's first coalition government since World War II.
"This is a genuine compromise between the parties," said William Hague, the new foreign secretary. "There are many things the Liberal Democrats have had to swallow that are very difficult for them, just as there are some things _ like holding a referendum on a new voting system _ that are very difficult for the Conservative Party to accept."
Cameron and Clegg agreed to a pact after the Conservative Party won the most seats in Britain's May 6 election, but fell short of winning a majority of seats in Parliament.
Cameron's Conservatives said senior lawmaker George Osborne will serve as Treasury chief, and lawmaker Liam Fox as defense secretary.
The coalition has already agreed on a five-year, fixed-term Parliament _ the first time Britain has had the date of its next election decided in advance. Both sides have made compromise, and Cameron has promised Clegg a referendum on his key issue: reform of Britain's electoral system aimed at creating a more proportional system.
"Nick Clegg and I are both political leaders who want to put aside party differences and work hard for the common good and for the national interest," Cameron said Tuesday.
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Associated Press Writers Jennifer Quinn, Raphael G. Satter and Jill Lawless contributed to this report.