May to resign as British PM

Blackleaf

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Theresa May announced this morning she will step down as Tory leader on Friday 7th June and carry on as PM until a successor is elected, probably in July.

As a result of her failure to deliver Brexit, this morning she was delivered an ultimatum at 10 Downing Street by Graham Brady, boss of the Tories' 1922 Committee: "Go or we'll force you out". Afterwards she made a tearful live speech in Downing Street announcing her resignation:

It is thought up to 20 Tories may enter the running to be new Tory leader and PM, including Graham Brady himself. It is almost certain a Brexiteer will get the job. Other runners will likely include the right-wing former Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab - who will likely push for a No Deal Brexit as PM - Jeremy Hunt, Liam Fox, Andrea Leadsom and Defence Secretary Penny Mordaunt. The favourite is former London Mayor and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson - but the favourite rarly gets the Tories' top job.
 

Kreskin

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Who the feck wants that job?

WANTED: "Whiny Cat Wrangler"
It's a bit like watching the WWE.


Speaking of which, last weekend there was an awesome match. These guys ended up in the stadium concession area smashing each other with garbage cans. The ref was there too, doing the 2-0count every now and then. Finally, after about half an hour, one guy got tossed onto a ladder and he never got up.


It was a classic!
 

pgs

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Will the winner deliver a no deal Brexit that the people want ? Or ?
 

Curious Cdn

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It's a bit like watching the WWE.
Speaking of which, last weekend there was an awesome match. These guys ended up in the stadium concession area smashing each other with garbage cans. The ref was there too, doing the 2-0count every now and then. Finally, after about half an hour, one guy got tossed onto a ladder and he never got up.
It was a classic!
Ladders man ... deadlier than AK-47s.
 

justlooking

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May 19, 2017
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Corbyn is branded 'classless' after twisting the knife into May by tweeting: 'She can't govern, and nor can her divided and disintegrating party'


  • The Labour leader initially refused to pay any tribute to the outgoing Tory leader
  • It came as MPs on all sides have praised the 'dignity' of her resignation
  • Tributes paid by EU rivals including Jean-Claude Juncker and Michel Barnier
  • Even Nigel Farage admitted: 'It is difficult not to feel for Mrs May'
 

Serryah

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IMO it's about time she just left. Despite trying (regardless of your view on how hard she tried), she could not make Brexit happen.


I say let it happen. Give the Brits a hard deal and see what happens. If they succeed, good, if they fail, then really it's on the people who wanted it and pushed for it.


I just sympathize for the friends I have over there regardless of where they stand.
 

Blackleaf

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Who the feck wants that job?

Tory leadership: Matt Hancock latest candidate to enter race

BBC News
25 May 2019


Jeremy Hunt, Boris Johnson, Rory Stewart and Esther McVey have already said they will run for the leadership


Conservative leadership contenders are setting out their stalls on Brexit as the race to succeed Theresa May begins.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock, the fifth Tory to enter the race, said Mrs May's successor must be more "brutally honest" about the "trade-offs" required to get a deal through Parliament.

And Rory Stewart said he would not serve under rival Boris Johnson because of his backing for a no-deal exit.

The leadership contest will determine who is the UK's next prime minister.

Party bosses expect a new leader to be chosen by the end of July.

Mrs May confirmed on Friday that she will resign as party leader on 7 June, but will continue as PM while the leadership contest takes place.

She agreed with chairman of the Tory backbench 1922 Committee, Sir Graham Brady, that the process to choose a new leader should begin the week after she stands down.


Health Secretary Matt Hancock

Five candidates have, so far, confirmed their intention to stand:

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt
International Development Secretary Rory Stewart
Health Secretary Matt Hancock
Former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson
Former Work and Pensions Secretary Esther McVey

'Fresh face' needed


Announcing his candidacy, Mr Hancock ruled out a snap general election in order to resolve the Brexit stalemate, saying this would be "disastrous for the country" and would risk seeing the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in power "by Christmas".

Instead, he said his focus would be on getting a Brexit deal through the current Parliament and "levelling" with MPs about what this would mean for the UK.

He told Radio 4's Today programme he would push harder on alternative arrangements to the Northern Irish backstop but also be more upfront than Mrs May had been about what compromises the UK would have to make.


Amber Rudd is not standing but wants to shape the debate on Brexit

Mr Hancock said there was no point in becoming prime minister unless he was straightforward about the trade offs - "between sovereignty and market access and the trade-offs to get a deal through this Parliament".

He also said the party needed a "leader for the future not just for now", capable of appealing to younger voters.

"We need to move on from the horrible politics of the last three years," he said.

"We need a fresh start and a fresh face to ensure this country wins the battles of the 2020s and remains prosperous for many years to come."

'Huge tensions'

Mr Stewart called for politicians to tell the truth about where they stood on Brexit and suggested, for that reason, he could not serve in a cabinet under Boris Johnson.

"It pains me to say it," he told BBC News.

"Boris has many, many qualities but I talked to him a few days ago and I thought he had said to me that he was not going for a no-deal exit.

"He has now come out and said yesterday that he is going for something which I believe is undeliverable, unnecessary and is going to damage our country and economy."

Mr Johnson told an economic conference in Switzerland on Friday that a new leader would have "the opportunity to do things differently".

"We will leave the EU on 31 October, deal or no deal. The way to get a good deal is to prepare for a no deal."

Most bookmakers have Mr Johnson as favourite, in front of former Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab and Environment Secretary Michael Gove, who has yet to declare his hand.

More than a dozen more senior Conservatives are believed to be seriously considering running - including Sir Graham, who has resigned as chair of the 1922 Committee.

Work and Pensions Secretary Amber Rudd has ruled herself out, telling the BBC the party and the country wants "someone who is more enthusiastic about Brexit than I am".

Asked who she would support, she told Radio 4's Today she would "not malign" any of the candidates but would prefer someone who "wants to find a compromise" on Brexit and be realistic about what can be achieved".

'Do things differently'

Tory MPs have until the week commencing 10 June to put their name forward, and any of them can stand - as long as they have the backing of two parliamentary colleagues.

The candidates will be whittled down until two remain, and in July all party members will vote to decide on the winner.

The Conservative Party had 124,000 members, as of March last year. The last leader elected by the membership was David Cameron in 2005, as Theresa May was unopposed in 2016.

It will be the first time Conservative members have directly elected a prime minister, as opposed to a leader of the opposition.

Announcing her departure in Downing Street, Mrs May urged her successor to "seek a way forward that honours the result of the referendum" and seek "consensus" in Parliament.

Meanwhile, shadow chancellor John McDonnell suggested Labour might need to harden its position on another Brexit referendum if the Tories elected someone willing to pursue a no-deal exit.

Mr McDonnell told Today that "some form of public vote" would definitely be needed in that situation and he would seek to talk to MPs from all parties to potentially try and bring down a government that tried to take the UK out without a deal.

Who are the Conservative members?

Most members of most parties in the UK are pretty middle-class. But Conservative Party members are the most middle-class of all: 86% fall into the ABC1 category.

Around a quarter of them are, or were, self-employed and nearly half of them work, or used to, in the private sector.

Nearly four out of 10 put their annual income at over £30,000, and one in 20 put it at over £100,000. As such, Tory members are considerably better-off than most voters.



https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-48403705
 
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Blackleaf

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Coffee House Steerpike

Full list: The runners and riders in the Tory leadership contest

Steerpike







Steerpike
24 May 2019
The Spectator

Now that Theresa May has officially announced the date of her resignation, the race to succeed her is on. Each Tory hopeful will now be using every trick in the book to win over their colleagues, build up a war chest and eventually, endear themselves to Tory members who will decide their fate.

Here is Mr Steerpike’s guide to the upcoming Tory leadership contest:

The odds:

According to the betting exchange $Markets, the current chances for the would-be Tory leaders stand at:

Boris Johnson: 40 per cent
Dominic Raab: 19 per cent
Michael Gove: 10 per cent
Andrea Leadsom: 6 per cent
Jeremy Hunt: 5 per cent
Rory Stewart: 5 per cent
Penny Mordaunt: 4 per cent

Leading the pack by a wide margin on 40 per cent (no doubt due to his popularity among the grassroots and wide support among Brexiteer MPs) is Boris Johnson. He’s followed by fellow Brexiteer Dominic Raab on 19 per cent – who is a full 9 percentage points ahead of third favourite Michael Gove.

Andrea Leadsom is currently in a respectable fourth place, while Jeremy Hunt (who considers himself a frontrunner) will be very disappointed to be in fifth place, with the odds indicating he only has a 5 per cent chance of becoming leader.

Lagging behind him is the new international development secretary Rory Stewart, who has officially announced he’s running and defence secretary, and dark horse, Penny Mordaunt. Not even listed in the favourites is current home secretary Sajid Javid, with the bookies’ odds suggesting he only has a 3 per cent chance of becoming leader.

Parliamentary support:

The Tory leadership race is broken into two sections: in the first, Conservative MPs vote for their preferred candidates in a knockout system, until the number of entrants is whittled down to two. Then, hustings take place across the country so that local members can choose between them. If Boris Johnson makes it into the second stage, it is widely predicted that he will be selected by local members – making the parliamentary section of the race crucial.
Coffee House is tracking which Conservatives MPs are backing which leadership candidates here.

The candidates:

Declared:

Boris Johnson, 54


Johnson vows to take Britain out of the EU on 31st October 'deal or no deal'

The clear favourite with party members and the bookies favourites to take the Tory crown, former foreign secretary Boris Johnson is seen by many in his party as the candidate most able to take on Nigel Farage’s insurgent Brexit party. But before members can vote for him, Boris first has to be selected in a ballot of Tory MPs for a place in the final two.

Grassroots support:

Comprehensive polling of Tory members by the Times/YouGov found Johnson would be the first choice of 39 per cent of Tory members in a leadership race – streets ahead of any other candidate. If Boris makes it to the members’ vote, it seems very likely that he will be the next Prime Minister.

Rory Stewart, 46

Tutor to Prince William and Harry, best-selling travel writer and son of a spy chief, Rory Stewart has perhaps the most interesting life story of the contenders. He declared his ambitions in an interview with The Spectator’s Katy Balls last month. A few weeks later, he made it to the cabinet having been promoted to Minister for International Development. He sees himself as a modernising force within the Tory party, insisting on the need to tackle the ‘climate emergency’ and win back younger voters.

Grassroots support:

If Rory Stewart does make it into the final two Tory leadership chances, Mr S wouldn’t fancy his chances. According to polling by the Times/YouGov, out of all the frontrunners, Stewart was the last choice of a whopping 29 per cent of Tory members. Only 4 per cent of members selected him as their first choice to be leader.

Esther McVey, 51

The ex-GMTV presenter launched her campaign with a tour of country pubs last week, announcing her bid during a TalkRadio broadcast on Thursday. McVey said she intended to declare if she had enough backing: ‘Now people have come forward and I have got that support, so I will be going forward.’ She resigned as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions in protest over the Brexit withdrawal deal late last year. McVey is hoping to attract blue-collar Conservative support, but her attempt to secure the top job is seen as ambitious after lagging in recent polls.

Grassroots support:

McVey’s popularity among the grassroots is something of an unknown quantity, having being excluded from recent polling of Tory members. Her brand of blue-collar Conservatism could win over some members, but hustings would be crucial for the former work and pensions secretary to bolster her support.

Matt Hancock, 40

The youngest contender in the pack, Hancock is known for his enthusiastic social media presence and is one of the dozens of MPs using Instagram to reach younger audiences. The Health Secretary said on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme today that ‘lots of people’ had urged him to stand. At an event that evening, Hancock said ‘the time for that decision hasn’t come’ in reference to a leadership bid.

Grassroots support:

The odds on the fresh-faced Matt Hancock becoming Tory leader plummeted this month, when it was revealed that a mere 1 per cent of Tory members thought he was best placed to lead the Conservative Party. Lots of people may be urging Hancock to run, but they probably don’t have a Tory membership card.

Jeremy Hunt, 52

The Foreign Secretary has a reasonable chance of making it to the final two against Boris Johnson, but only has an implied 5 per cent chance of succeeding May according to the bookies. He took a swipe at Boris in April with his remark that: ‘There is one very big difference between Boris Johnson and me and that is that I am Foreign Secretary and have a big job to do to try to get this deal over the line.’

Grassroots support:

While he is considered to have lots of support from Conservative MPs, Hunt fares far less well when it comes to members. In recent polling, only 8 per cent of Conservative members said he was their first choice of candidate, while only 29 per cent thought he was capable of winning a general election.

Expected to declare:

Dominic Raab, 45

With a reputation as a committed Brexiteer, former Brexit minister Dominic Raab is currently the second most likely candidate to become Tory leader after Johnson. Raab has already announced the policies we would like to pursue as leader – at a Telegraph debate he promised to slash income tax by a penny each year, and has proposed a law to protect mothers from redundancy for six months after returning to work.

Grassroots support:

Raab’s chances suffer slightly though when it comes to the grassroots, with only 13 per cent of Tory members picking him as their first choice of Tory leader. However, Raab is the second choice of 21 per cent of members, far more than any other candidate. It seems likely that if it were the choice between Raab and any other candidate apart from Boris, he would have a good chance of winning.

Michael Gove, 51

Gove may be tainted by his betrayal of Boris Johnson in 2017, but he still is as the third favourite to take over from May. Gove is seen as the most intellectually capable minister in the cabinet and has already made some leadership moves, including an interview at his parents’ house in early May in which he criticised Sturgeon’s Scottish independence ambitions.

Grassroots support:

Gove is the favourite of 9 per cent of Tory members, and the second choice candidate of 14 per cent. Perhaps as a result of his conduct during the 2016 leadership race to replace Cameron, only 35 per cent of the membership consider him to be ‘likeable’, but they do think he is the second most ‘competent’ candidate after Boris Johnson.

Andrea Leadsom, 56

The last time Leadsom ran for the top job, she was sunk after comments she made to the Times’ Rachel Sylvester about May’s lack of children. This time around she is being more cautious, telling Good Morning Britain on the 8 May that she is ‘seriously considering’ a bid. The Leader of the House was once the host of the so-called ‘Pizza Club’ in her offices, where ministers met over a takeaway to plan their opposition to the Withdrawal Agreement.

Grassroots support:

Andrea Leadsom has not been included in recent polling of Tory members, but her recent decision to resign from Cabinet after Theresa May sought to allow a parliamentary vote on a second referendum, has bolstered her Brexiteer credentials, and will be expected to go down well with members.

Liz Truss, 42

Truss’ garish fashion shoot entertained Twitter for an afternoon earlier this month, as she announced her policy ideas with an interview in the Mail on Sunday. The Chief Secretary to the Treasury proposed building a million homes on the Green Belt, and warned that the Tory party faced ‘annihilation’ at the hands of the Brexit Party. ‘You have to put yourself forward, no one else will,’ she said. Her previous ministerial positions include Lord Chancellor, the first women in the role’s thousand-year history.

Grassroots support:

Recent polling of Tory members hasn’t included Liz Truss, but her frequent media appearances, bold policy announcements, and strident backing of Brexit could make her a popular choice.

Penny Mordaunt, 46

Mordaunt was the perfect choice for Theresa May to fill the vacancy in the Ministry of Defence left after Gavin Williamson’s sacking. An ex-reservist and the first woman in the role, Mordaunt raised eyebrows in 2014 after an innuendo-laden speech on poultry farming which mentioned the word ‘cock’ six times and ‘lay’ or ‘laid’ five times. She later explained it was to honour a Navy dare. Her recent promotion has improved her odds on becoming the next leader, as has her strong Brexiteer stance.

Grassroots support:

Only 5 per cent of Tory members think, according to polling from the Times/YouGov, that Mordaunt would be the best person to lead the party, making her chances of success (if she made it to the final two) reasonably unlikely.

Sajid Javid, 49

In a speech which was seen as a covert bid to increase his support among Tory members, the Home Secretary announced earlier this month an overhaul of espionage and treason laws. If elected, Javid would be first Muslim PM, and could herald a new direction for the party. He boasts a supportive Twitter account called ‘Avid4Javid’ with 400 followers.

Grassroots support:

While Javid was considered an early frontrunner to replace Theresa May, Tory members are not exactly his biggest fans. He is the favourite candidate of only 9 per cent of local Conservatives, but is at least considered the third most ‘competent’ candidate of the favourites.

Graham Brady, 52

Proving that just about every single Tory MP thinks they now have a shot at becoming leader, the chairman of the 1922 committee of backbench Tory MPs, Graham Brady, has announced his resignation so that he can consider standing for leader.

Brady’s leadership pitch is likely to include support for his ‘Brady amendment’, which called for ‘alternative arrangements’ to the backstop, and is the only Brexit deal to achieve a majority in the House of Commons.

Kingmakers:

Amber Rudd, 55

Amber Rudd joined 59 other MPs at the launch of the One Nation caucus on a ‘moderate, pro-business, low tax’ platform. While the group is heavily opposed to a Raab bid, Newsnight subsequently reported that there was tentative support for Boris Johnson given his past successes in London. Boris responded to the news by praising Rudd’s group on Twitter, writing that “One Nation values have never been more important.” Those paying attention spotted Rudd’s account liking the tweet moments later. Rudd – who is positioning herself in a kingmaker role – will be important in deciding which candidates make the final cut.

Gavin Williamson, 42

Like a boyfriend taking a breakup badly, Williamson’s social media has insisted he is doing fine after being sacked as defence secretary in early May. Before the dismissal, Williamson let it be known many leadership candidates hoped to secure his backing. He has now come out for the Boris campaign – and Steerpike understands he is taking on an active role behind the scenes.

Arlene Foster, 48

Whoever the next Tory leader is they will have to court DUP leader Arlene Foster, whose party has propped up the government since the disastrous 2017 snap election. Foster condemned May’s Brexit negotiations as “hopeless” as she launched the DUP’s EU election manifesto on 13th May. But a Tory candidate who promises to do something about the Irish backstop will find it easy to win Foster’s support.

https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2019/...rs-and-riders-in-the-tory-leadership-contest/
 

Blackleaf

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IMO it's about time she just left. Despite trying (regardless of your view on how hard she tried), she could not make Brexit happen.


I say let it happen. Give the Brits a hard deal and see what happens. If they succeed, good, if they fail, then really it's on the people who wanted it and pushed for it.


I just sympathize for the friends I have over there regardless of where they stand.

If you want to see just how much Britain suffers in the EU just look at the current demise of British Steel.

Remainers like to say that thousands of British jobs depend on being in the EU - and they are saying that Brexit is to blame for the demise of British Steel.

In fact, the reality is the opposite on both counts - it is the EU which is to blame for the demise of British Steel and the resultant loss of jobs.

EU rules state that struggling firms cannot be given state aid. Thus, Britain is powerless to help British Steel while it's in the EU. Had Britain not been in the EU, the British Government could have stepped in to help British Steel.

https://www.spiked-online.com/2019/05/24/british-steel-all-about-brexit/
 

Serryah

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If you want to see just how much Britain suffers in the EU just look at the current demise of British Steel.

Remainers like to say that thousands of British jobs depend on being in the EU - and they are saying that Brexit is to blame for the demise of British Steel.

In fact, the reality is the opposite on both counts - it is the EU which is to blame for the demise of British Steel and the resultant loss of jobs.

EU rules state that struggling firms cannot be given state aid. Thus, Britain is powerless to help British Steel while it's in the EU. Had Britain not been in the EU, the British Government could have stepped in to help British Steel.

https://www.spiked-online.com/2019/05/24/british-steel-all-about-brexit/


You've no reading comprehension what so ever.


You live in Bliss.


Again, I feel for all my Brit friends going through the BS in their country right now.
 

Blackleaf

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You've no reading comprehension what so ever.
You live in Bliss.
Again, I feel for all my Brit friends going through the BS in their country right now.

I feel sorry for all those steelworkers in Redcar who lost their jobs - and all those British Steel workers about to lose theirs - as a result of an EU-caused collapse of the British steel industry.

All thanks to the EU, the British government is unable to aid British Steel.

It's no wonder people in the steel-producing areas of the North East of England voted overwhelmingly for Brexit.
 

Curious Cdn

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I feel sorry for all those steelworkers in Redcar who lost their jobs - and all those British Steel workers about to lose theirs - as a result of an EU-caused collapse of the British steel industry.
All thanks to the EU, the British government is unable to aid British Steel.
It's no wonder people in the steel-producing areas of the North East of England voted overwhelmingly for Brexit.
The Steel industry petered out here, too and it had zero to do with the EU and everything to do with rising Asian economies and our post-industrialism. No one can afford to buy steel made in places like the UK, USA, Canada ... and the EU for that matter.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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Unlike in the UK.
Delusional.

You're like the MAGA hillbillies down in the States who think that foreigners stole their manufacturing jobs rather than understanding that their industries became obsolete because of fat-and-sassy complacency.

Probably , the biggest killer of British jobs was the militant trade unions and the failed class war that they waged in the 60s and 70s. Lots of those guys migrated to Canada and the trade unions here were full of ex-pat Brits with Midland accents trying to import the same crap to this country.
 

Blackleaf

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Delusional.

So let's get this straight: You're saying that the EU does NOT have laws which prevent Member States' governments from intervening to help companies in trouble and that it was NOT EU carbon emissions targets which helped get British Steel in trouble in the first place?

You're saying that the British Government CAN intervene to help save British Steel because there are no EU rules which prevent it?!

If so, I'd better inform the government...

Leave it to good old Nige to just say it as it is:


 
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Curious Cdn

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So let's get this straight: You're saying that the EU does NOT have laws which prevent Member States' governments from intervening to help companies in trouble and that it was NOT EU carbon emissions targets which helped get British Steel in trouble in the first place?
You're saying that the British Government CAN intervene to help save British Steel because there are no EU rules which prevent it?!
If so, I'd better inform the government...
Leave it to good old Nige to just say it as it is:


You've outgrown steel production. It's a thing of the past , like building ocean liners, weaving textiles and mining coal. Time to learn some new tricks, eh?