"We have just finished a meeting with the British prime minister and her secretary of state and we told her very directly that she was in breach of the Good Friday agreement", Adams said.
The Prime Minister will meet with Sinn Fein, the Ulster Unionists, the SDLP and Alliance Party in separate engagements in Downing Street.
"They can't have it both way, it has to be dealt with sensibly".
Backing the planned demo by the Love Equality Coalition she said: "Many people have been shocked at the dated views of the Democratic Unionist Party when it comes to social policy like equal marriage and abortion".
"The DUP supported Brexit but they will be very keen to secure a future trading arrangement with the European Union which allows barrier free trade between Northern ireland and the Republic of Ireland, especially in food and agricultural products".
SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon also said she was concerned about the prospect of a DUP-Conservatives deal.
She said: "There is an irony to being lectured by some about our role in the national government of the United Kingdom when Sinn Fein want to be in government here in the Republic of Ireland".
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Legislation already exists to accomplish nearly exactly what Trump wants, as Congress has previously debated the matter at length. However, fellow Republicans on Capitol Hill were wary about a plan that would add billions to the deficit or increase taxes.
Speaking in London on Wednesday, a senior Conservative official said talks with the DUP are progressing well and there is broad agreement on the principles of the June 21 Queen's Speech, in which the monarch sets out the government's headline plans. "The danger is that however much any government tries it will not be seen to be impartial if it is locked into a parliamentary deal", 1990s Conservative prime minister John Major told BBC radio.
"The UK Government is offering whatever support we can, working alongside the Irish government, as appropriate, honouring our respective commitments in the Belfast Agreement to serve the interests of the whole community in Northern Ireland", he said.
May received members of Northern Ireland's other political parties on Thursday to reassure them that any deal with the DUP would not affect the government's neutrality in Northern Ireland. Only the Labour Party has a clear proposal for a soft Brexit.
The performance of the British economy could also influence perceptions of Brexit.
Northern Ireland's largest nationalist party Sinn Fein said it would oppose any deal that undermines a peace deal known as the Good Friday Agreement, with President Gerry Adams telling Britain: "We want to govern ourselves".
While the DUP are deeply eurosceptic, they have balked at some of the practical implications of a so-called hard Brexit - including the potential loss of an open border with the Republic of Ireland - and the talks were likely to touch on efforts to minimize the potential damage to Northern Ireland.





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