The Queen's Speech - in which the
government sets out its legislative programme - has been delayed for a
few days, the BBC understands.
The set-piece event had been due to take place on Monday 19 June.
The Conservatives are negotiating with the Democratic Unionist Party to get support for their minority government.
Brexit
Secretary David Davis predicted some parts of the Tory manifesto would
now have to be "pruned" after the Tories lost their Commons majority.
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The Queen's Speech is written by the government and presents an
outline of its planned legislation for the next Parliamentary session.
BBC
assistant political editor Norman Smith said the decision to delay it
revealed an "ambiguity" about what would go in it - with several
manifesto pledges expected to be watered down or dropped - but also the
need for the Tories to "nail down" DUP support.
A defeat for its Queen's Speech would be tantamount to a vote of no confidence in the new minority government, he said.
One
of the reasons for the delay is also believed to be because the speech
has to be written on goat's skin parchment paper, which takes a few days
to dry - and the Tory negotiations with the DUP mean it cannot be ready
in time.
Theresa May will face questions later from her backbenchers for the first time since Thursday's election.
They are expected to raise concerns about her leadership style, and press for more details on talks with the DUP.
Mrs May's new cabinet will also meet for the first time after a reshuffle.
Speaking
on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Davis said that while the Tory
election campaign had been disappointing, Mrs May was a "formidable
prime minister" and accused people speculating about her leadership of
"the absolute height of self-indulgence".
But Labour leader Jeremy
Corbyn has accused Mrs May of "squatting" in No 10, telling the BBC's
Andrew Marr Show on Sunday that the country "cannot go on with a period
of great instability".
The PM finalised her cabinet with a small reshuffle, with Michael Gove returning to a ministerial role as environment secretary.
Mr
Gove, who took on Mrs May for the party leadership after David Cameron
quit, was sacked by the PM in her reshuffle in July last year.
The Conservatives went from 331 seats to 318 in the general election, while Labour increased its number of MPs from 232 to 262.
BBC
political correspondent Iain Watson said the meeting with the committee
had been brought forward by 24 hours, not because of panic within the
party, but possibly as a way of avoiding it.
One MP told him: "The wise heads will need to tell any hotheads to calm down."
The
1922 Committee is made up of all Conservative backbenchers - the name
is taken from the year in which its original members were elected.
Its
primary function is to keep the leadership of the party informed of the
mood among the rank and file, and if a Conservative leader or other
senior figure loses its support they could be in a particularly
vulnerable position.
Graham Brady, chairman of the committee, told
BBC One's Sunday Politics there was "zero appetite" among the public
for another election.
A
number of high-profile members kept their posts in Sunday's cabinet
reshuffle, with Philip Hammond staying at the Treasury, Boris Johnson
remaining at the Foreign Office and Amber Rudd keeping the Home Office
brief.
But some changed jobs too, with Liz Truss being demoted from justice secretary to become chief secretary to the Treasury.
Damian
Green, who was work and pensions secretary, has been promoted to become
the first secretary of state - effectively Mrs May's second in command.
'Diminished authority'
Analysis by BBC political correspondent Iain Watson
Widespread demands for Mrs May to go are not expected at Monday's 1922 Committee meeting.
Instead,
there will be demands for her to consult more, including meeting
regularly with the 1922 executive, and to turn Downing Street from a
bunker into an open house by broadening her range of staff.
However, few MPs expect her position to be strong and stable for the next five years.
One
senior backbencher told me: "It is inconceivable she will lead the
party into the next election. Her authority has been diminished
unquestionably."
Another said: "Party members have been too bruised by her."
"She
has bought herself some time", said another senior backbencher, but
added: "How she behaves will determine how long she's there."
There is a feeling that the party is holding on to nurse for fear of something worse.
Johnson: MPs should get a grip
After
speculation in the Sunday newspapers that he was mounting a leadership
challenge, Mr Johnson has called for Tory MPs to back Mrs May.
Writing in Monday's Sun,
the foreign secretary said those calling for the PM to step down should
"get a grip", adding the electorate wanted the government to "get on
with the job".
Mr Johnson admitted the prime minister's election campaign did not go
well - "to put it mildly" - and that Tory messages "got lost or
misunderstood".
But he added: "Theresa May led a campaign that
inspired 13.7m people to vote Conservative, in the biggest total tally
of Tory votes since the days of Margaret Thatcher.
"That is a stunning achievement, for which she deserves the support of her party. And she will certainly get it from me."
He also said the proposal of a deal with the DUP to keep her minority government in power was "feasible".
"The people of Britain have had a bellyful of promises and politicking," he wrote.
"Now is the time for delivery - and Theresa May is the right person to continue that vital work."
Michael Gove's 'surprise'
The return of Mr Gove to the front bench as environment secretary has been a shock to some, including the politician himself.
Speaking to Sky News on Sunday, he said he had been "quite surprised" to be asked to rejoin the cabinet.
He
added: "Of course I knew that today was reshuffle day, but I genuinely
didn't expect this role - although I am delighted to be part of the
government, and delighted to be able to support Theresa."
However, the BBC's environment analyst Roger Harrabin says green
campaigners are appalled at Mr Gove's appointment, pointing to his time
as education secretary, when he tried to remove climate change from the
geography curriculum, and as chief whip, when he blocked the then
environment secretary from important international talks.
Tom Burke, from green think tank E3G, told BBC News: "The environment is something young voters really care about.
"If the Tories really want to reconnect with the youth surge, this is about the worst option they could have chosen."
But others have welcomed the new minister.
One
senior farming industry source said they were happy that a "big hitter"
was taking the top job at the Department for Environment and Rural
Affairs (Defra).
"Defra has long been a backwater, so at last it's not someone in charge who is being put out to grass," he said.
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