Yikes.
What the hell is going on over there.
David Cameron’s departure so sudden that his family won’t have time to return to pre-Downing Street home
David Cameron will make his last appearance at Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday before formally resigning the premiership in his last official meeting with the Queen at Buckingham Palace.
“We will have a new prime minister in that building behind me by Wednesday evening,” Cameron said in a brusque statement before the black door of 10 Downing Street, which has been his office and home for six years and two months.
The timetable that will allow Cameron to chair his final Cabinet meeting today and bid farewell to the House of Commons tomorrow was hastily agreed between Tory officials yesterday.
Theoretically, Theresa May could have been sworn in as prime minister today, although that might have required her and Cameron to make a trip to Sandringham, in Norfolk, to see the Queen.
Instead, officials including Lord Feldman, the Conservative chairman and a close friend of Cameron, agreed to prolong his premiership for a few more hours, allowing him to receive a generous Commons tribute from MPs, much like the send-off members gave Tony Blair in 2007 – a fitting end to the tenure of a Tory leader who once described himself as “the heir to Blair.”
Despite that last-minute extension, Cameron’s departure from Downing Street will still come much sooner than he had expected or wanted, and dashes his hopes of defining his political legacy during a relatively long and leisurely last few months in office.
Cameron announced his intention to resign hours after the EU referendum result was announced in the early hours of June 24, suggesting that he would stay in No. 10 until early October.
Some colleagues had suggested he was trying to “hang on” to office as long as possible, but he is now expected to move his family out of the Downing Street flat before the end of the week.
David Cameron’s departure so sudden that his family won’t have time to return to pre-Downing Street home
What the hell is going on over there.
David Cameron’s departure so sudden that his family won’t have time to return to pre-Downing Street home
David Cameron will make his last appearance at Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday before formally resigning the premiership in his last official meeting with the Queen at Buckingham Palace.
“We will have a new prime minister in that building behind me by Wednesday evening,” Cameron said in a brusque statement before the black door of 10 Downing Street, which has been his office and home for six years and two months.
The timetable that will allow Cameron to chair his final Cabinet meeting today and bid farewell to the House of Commons tomorrow was hastily agreed between Tory officials yesterday.
Theoretically, Theresa May could have been sworn in as prime minister today, although that might have required her and Cameron to make a trip to Sandringham, in Norfolk, to see the Queen.
Instead, officials including Lord Feldman, the Conservative chairman and a close friend of Cameron, agreed to prolong his premiership for a few more hours, allowing him to receive a generous Commons tribute from MPs, much like the send-off members gave Tony Blair in 2007 – a fitting end to the tenure of a Tory leader who once described himself as “the heir to Blair.”
Despite that last-minute extension, Cameron’s departure from Downing Street will still come much sooner than he had expected or wanted, and dashes his hopes of defining his political legacy during a relatively long and leisurely last few months in office.
Cameron announced his intention to resign hours after the EU referendum result was announced in the early hours of June 24, suggesting that he would stay in No. 10 until early October.
Some colleagues had suggested he was trying to “hang on” to office as long as possible, but he is now expected to move his family out of the Downing Street flat before the end of the week.
David Cameron’s departure so sudden that his family won’t have time to return to pre-Downing Street home