May vows to remain loyal to her successor
LONDON: Prime Minister Theresa May has vowed to remain loyal to her successor, as she prepares to step aside for either Boris Johnson or Jeremy Hunt.
May said she would do “everything I can” to ensure there is a Conservative government, and confirmed that she had voted in the final round of the Tory leadership contest. Frontrunner Johnson is widely predicted to beat Foreign Secretary Hunt to be announced as the next party leader on Tuesday, and May will stand down the following day.
In an interview with the Daily Express, May was asked whether she would remain loyal to her successor. She replied: “Absolutely. It is important that we have a Conservative government, particularly given the nature of the opposition we have at the moment. I will be doing everything I can to make sure that we have a Conservative government.”
Her comments came after Chancellor Philip Hammond fired a warning shot to Johnson, saying he would do “everything in my power” to block a no-deal Brexit and left open the possibility of voting to bring down a Conservative government in such an event.
May said she had not told anyone, including her husband Philip, who had won her vote, and said she does not have any plans “at the moment” to write a memoir recounting her time in Number 10.
“There are those who say that people who are involved with matters of national significance should put something down about how they saw it at the time for future historians, but I’ve not got any plans at the moment,” she told the paper. I’m going to take some time off, have a holiday and adjust to the new world.”
May also said she had been “touched by the huge amount of support I’ve received from the public” including gifts, flowers, letters and emails after announcing her intention to stand down. Her comments came after US president Donald Trump said Johnson will do a “great job” if he becomes prime minister next week. Trump said he thought he would have a “great relationship” with the former foreign secretary and repeated his criticism of May’s handling of Brexit. The president said: “I like Boris Johnson. Boris, I spoke to him yesterday. I think he’s going to do a great job. I think we’re going to have a great relationship.”
He added: “I think they’ve done a very poor job with Brexit. I think the previous prime minister has done a very bad job with Brexit. What can I say? I mean it’s a disaster and it shouldn’t be that way. I think Boris will straighten it out.”
-
Japan: PM Takaichi Flags China ‘Coercion,’ Pledges Defence Security Overhaul -
Angorie Rice Spills The Beans On Major Details From Season 2 Of ' The Last Thing He Told Me' -
Questions Raised Over Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's Line Of Succession -
'Shameless' Sarah Ferguson 'pressuring' Princess Eugenie, Beatrice For Major Reason -
Teacher Arrested After Confessing To Cocaine Use During Classes -
Paul McCartney Talks 'very Emotional' Footage Of Late Wife Linda In New Doc -
Princess Beatrice, Princess Eugenie's Response To Andrew's Arrest Revealed -
King Charles And Princess Anne Bestow Honours At Windsor Castle -
King Charles 'worried' As Buckingham Palace, Royal Family Facing 'biggest Crisis' -
Milo Ventimiglia Recalls First Meeting With Arielle Kebbel On The Sets Of 'Gilmore Girls' Amid New Project -
Eric Dane Infuriated After ALS Diagnosis As He Feared The Disease Would Take Him Away From His Girls -
It's A Boy! Luke Combs, Wife Nicole Welcome Third Child -
Leading Astrophysicist Shot Dead At Southern California Home -
Johnny Depp's Kind Gesture Towards Late 'Grey's Anatomy' Actor Eric Dane Before Death Laid Bare -
How Princess Eugenie, Beatrice React To Andrew Arrest? -
Kylie Jenner 'convinced' Gwyneth Paltrow Is 'crushing' On Timothee Chalamet: 'It's Disrespectful'