May resigns, to act as PM until new leader elected : The Tribune India

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May resigns, to act as PM until new leader elected

LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May on Friday formally resigned as the leader of the ruling Conservative Party, paving the way for a keen contest to decide a new premier who will take charge of the UK’s tough divorce negotiations with the European Union (EU).

May resigns, to act as PM until new leader elected

Theresa May, British Prime Minister



London, June 7 

British Prime Minister Theresa May on Friday formally resigned as the leader of the ruling Conservative Party, paving the way for a keen contest to decide a new premier who will take charge of the UK’s tough divorce negotiations with the European Union (EU).

May, who had stepped down amid mounting pressure over her repeatedly defeated Brexit deal, will continue as acting prime minister until the party has elected her successor, who will then take charge as the premier.

May, 62, handed in her private resignation letter to the backbench 1922 Committee, two weeks after announcing her intention to leave, the BBC reported.

The committee said it was now inviting nominations from those Conservative MPs “who wish to stand for election as the next party leader”.

There are so far 11 hopefuls, including frontrunner Boris Johnson, the former foreign secretary. The other key contenders are foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt and environment secretary Michael Gove. The winner of the contest is expected to be announced in the week of July 22. The formal Tory voting process will be triggered on Monday morning.

“It is, and will always remain, a matter of deep regret to me that I have not been able to deliver Brexit,” May, Britain’s second female Prime Minister after Margaret Thatcher, said in her emotional speech on the steps of Downing Street on May 23.

“It will be for my successor to seek a way forward that honours the result of the referendum. To succeed, he or she will have to find consensus in Parliament where I have not. Such a consensus can only be reached if those on all sides of the debate are willing to compromise,” she said, indicating the tough road ahead for new leader.

May has been PM for nearly three years since she took over from David Cameron in the wake of the June 2016 Brexit referendum. 

The leadership candidates need eight MPs to back them. Conservative Party MPs will then vote for their preferred candidates in a series of secret ballots held on June 13, 18, 19 and 20.

Charles Walker of the Conservative backbench 1922 Committee, which sets the rules of the contest, said: “We are aiming to have two people by Thursday 20 June.” The final two will be put to a vote of members of the wider Conservative Party, with a winner expected to be announced in the week of July 22.

Contenders have already been conducting their hustings as they lay out their credentials for the top job. How they plan to deal with Britain’s exit from the European Union (EU) will be at the heart of all their bids, with many backing a no-deal exit as others warn against such an extreme step. — PTI

Brexit claims: Johnson fends off court case

  • Judges at London’s High Court on Friday threw out an attempt to prosecute Boris Johnson, the frontrunner to succeed Theresa May as prime minister, for allegedly lying about the financial benefits of Brexit during the 2016 EU referendum campaign
  • The decision removes a hurdle for Johnson in his leadership bid, with his lawyers persuading a London court that the private prosecution was “politically motivated and vexatious”
  • Last week, a magistrate agreed to issue summonses for Johnson to face charges of misconduct in public office over a claim emblazoned on his bright red “Leave” campaign bus that Britain would be £350 million pounds a week better off outside the EU
  • Opponents had argued that the slogan was deliberately misleading and it became symbolic of the divisions caused by the referendum, which saw Britons vote 52-48% to leave the European Union
  • But at a judicial review hearing on Friday at the High Court, Johnson’s lawyer Adrian Darbishire said the magistrate had either erred in law or provided the wrong legal test in allowing the case to go ahead

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