British Prime Minister Theresa May reacts as she delivers a statement in London, Britain, May 24, 2019. Reuters
British Prime Minister Theresa May reacts as she delivers a statement in London, Britain, May 24, 2019. Reuters
British Prime Minister Theresa May reacts as she delivers a statement in London, Britain, May 24, 2019. Reuters
British Prime Minister Theresa May reacts as she delivers a statement in London, Britain, May 24, 2019. Reuters

British prime minister Theresa May announces her resignation


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Theresa May has announced she will be stepping down as Conservative leader on June 7, triggering a party contest to choose the new prime minister of the United Kingdom.

"It is and will always remain a matter of deep regret to me that I have not been able to deliver Brexit," Mrs May said during her resignation statement outside No 10 Downing Street on Friday.

Mrs May became emotional at the end of her short speech, holding back tears as she said it was an honour to serve as prime minister.

"I will shortly leave the job that has been the honour of my life to hold. The second female prime minister but certainly not the last. I do so with no ill will but with enormous and enduring gratitude to have had the opportunity to serve the country I love," she said.

An election to choose her replacement as prime minister will begin the week after she steps down as Conservative party leader.

Party bosses hope to have a new leader in place by the end of July. The result will shape the direction of Brexit and all options - from leaving with no deal to cancelling the divorce - are now back on the table.

Reacting to the news, opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said Mrs May's replacement should call a general election.

Mrs May’s decision heralds the end of a turbulent, three-year premiership that’s been marked by bitter divisions within her party and across Britain over how to leave the European Union.

  • British Prime Minister Theresa May and her husband Philip May stand on the steps of 10 Downing Street in London on July 13, 2016. AP Photo
    British Prime Minister Theresa May and her husband Philip May stand on the steps of 10 Downing Street in London on July 13, 2016. AP Photo
  • May, pictured here in April 2018, says she will step down as Conservative leader on June 7, 2019. AP Photo
    May, pictured here in April 2018, says she will step down as Conservative leader on June 7, 2019. AP Photo
  • Theresa May during a working dinner meeting at the Nato headquarters in May 2017. AP Photo
    Theresa May during a working dinner meeting at the Nato headquarters in May 2017. AP Photo
  • Theresa May during a press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, in February 2018. AP Photo
    Theresa May during a press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, in February 2018. AP Photo
  • Theresa May waits for the arrival of European Council President Donald Tusk prior to a bilateral meeting in Brussels. AP Photo
    Theresa May waits for the arrival of European Council President Donald Tusk prior to a bilateral meeting in Brussels. AP Photo
  • Mrs May, left is interviewed by broadcaster Jeremy Paxman, during a general election broadcast, in London on May 29, 2017/ Pool Photo via AP, File
    Mrs May, left is interviewed by broadcaster Jeremy Paxman, during a general election broadcast, in London on May 29, 2017/ Pool Photo via AP, File
  • Theresa May reacts during a press conference inside 10 Downing Street in London in November 2018. AP Photo/
    Theresa May reacts during a press conference inside 10 Downing Street in London in November 2018. AP Photo/
  • Mrs May, then Home Secretary, with a spring in her step after attending a cabinet meeting in London on Junly 12, 2016. AP
    Mrs May, then Home Secretary, with a spring in her step after attending a cabinet meeting in London on Junly 12, 2016. AP
  • Queen Elizabeth II welcomes Theresa May, left, at the start of an audience in Buckingham Palace, London, where she invited the former Home Secretary to become Prime Minister and form a new government. Pool Photo via AP, File
    Queen Elizabeth II welcomes Theresa May, left, at the start of an audience in Buckingham Palace, London, where she invited the former Home Secretary to become Prime Minister and form a new government. Pool Photo via AP, File
  • Mrs May with Japanese PM Shinzo Abe. AP
    Mrs May with Japanese PM Shinzo Abe. AP
  • The May Bot dance at the Conservative Paty Conference in Birmingham in 2018. Getty Images
    The May Bot dance at the Conservative Paty Conference in Birmingham in 2018. Getty Images
  • Mrs May gets her P45 by a pranksteter at Conservative Party Conference at Manchester Central on October 4, 2017. Getty Images
    Mrs May gets her P45 by a pranksteter at Conservative Party Conference at Manchester Central on October 4, 2017. Getty Images

The UK was due to withdraw from the EU on March 29. But Mrs May’s inability to get the divorce deal she negotiated in Brussels approved in Britain’s deadlocked Parliament has forced her to delay exit day until October.

It will be for Mrs May's successor to define the course of Brexit. The current favourite is pro-Leave campaigner Boris Johnson, the UK’s former Foreign Secretary, who favours a quick, sharp split the EU.

Mr Johnson thanked Mrs May for her leadership on Twitter adding that it was time to "come together and deliver Brexit".

Another potential leadership candidate Michael Gove, the current environment minister, also paid tribute to the prime minister on Twitter.

Helen Grant resigned from her government role as Conservative vice chairman for Communities on Friday  to support former Brexit secretary Dominic Raab's leadership bid.

Mr Raab, who quit his government post in protest at Mrs May's Brexit deal, is a Brexiter who has promised to slash income tax.

The pound inched up after Mrs May announced her leave date, following 14 days of consecutive losses against the euro.

Mrs May had little choice but to set a date for her departure to avoid the humiliation of being hounded from office.

Members of her own party had become angry with her handling of Brexit and fearful the party will suffer a crushing defeat in the European Parliament elections at the hands of Nigel Farage’s Brexit Party.

Conservative officials were considering changing the party’s rules to hold a vote to force Mrs May out within days. Instead she has decided to go voluntarily, after President Donald Trump’s state visit to Britain, one of the people said. She will remain as a caretaker prime minister while her successor is chosen in a contest that could take six weeks.

The final crisis of Mrs May’s beleaguered leadership began on Tuesday when she announced her last-gasp plan to persuade members of Parliament to back the Brexit deal she spent two years negotiating with the EU. It was instantly rejected, leaving Britain’s divorce from the bloc in disarray and May with nowhere to go.

Pro-Brexit Conservatives, including ministers in her Cabinet, spent much of Wednesday plotting how to kill off Mrs May’s plan. Their main target was to stamp on her idea of letting Parliament vote to allow a second referendum to ratify the terms of the UK’s exit.

On Wednesday night, high-profile minister Andrea Leadsom quit May’s Cabinet in protest at the plans. Other ministers - including Home Secretary Sajid Javid and Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt - made it clear they didn’t support Mrs May’s proposed Withdrawal Agreement Bill.

That draft law - which includes the referendum promise - was due to be put to a vote in the House of Commons in the first week of June but has now been put on ice.

Earlier on Thursday, Mrs May seemed to be digging in, with her spokesman insisting she hadn’t given up on delivering Brexit. Government Whip Mark Spencer told parliament in the morning that Mrs May still planned to publish the Withdrawal Bill in the first week of June. As Thursday went on, it became clear her position couldn’t last.

“Politics is a nasty sometimes brutal, ghastly business," said Iain Duncan Smith, a Brexiter and former Conservative leader. "She has no confidence, not just within her party but in the cabinet too.”