Race for Britain`s Brexit PM heats up after Boris bows out

Home Secretary Minister Theresa May is now leading five candidates vying to replace Prime Minister David Cameron, who resigned after losing the referendum on EU membership
Home Secretary Minister Theresa May is now leading five candidates vying to replace Prime Minister David Cameron, who resigned after losing the referendum on EU membership
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AFP, London :Britain’s ruling Conservative Party was left reeling on Friday, after the shock withdrawal of favourite Boris Johnson from the race to become prime minister in the wake of the vote to leave the EU.Interior Minister Theresa May is now leading five candidates vying to replace Prime Minister David Cameron, who announced his resignation after losing the referendum on Britain’s membership of the 28-nation alliance.May urged voters to stay in the European Union before the poll, but promised to respect their verdict if she took office. She has said she would not trigger the exit process until next year.EU leaders have called for a swift divorce following last week’s seismic vote, fearful of the impact of Britain’s uncertain future on economic growth and the potential domino effect in eurosceptic member states.Ratings agency Standard and Poor’s cut the EU’s credit rating by one notch on Thursday to AA, its third-highest level, saying it now considered “cohesion within the EU” was a “neutral rather than positive rating factor”. A spokesman for the International Monetary Fund said the uncertainty sparked by the British vote was “probably the biggest risk to the global economy”.The surprise decision by Johnson, long considered a favourite to succeed Cameron, to rule himself out has upended the Conservative leadership contest.The former London mayor made his announcement after fellow Brexit campaigner Michael Gove effectively torpedoed his chances by announcing his own surprise bid for the top job. A number of senior Conservatives subsequently lined up behind May, including the transport and defence ministers.The mass-selling Daily Mail newspaper endorsed her candidacy on Friday with a front-page headline saying: “A party in flames and why it must be Theresa”. Cameron, who campaigned hard for Britain to stay in the EU, has said he will leave it to his successor to start formal exit talks.In a speech on Thursday declaring her candidacy, May insisted that “Brexit means Brexit”.”The campaign was fought, the vote was held, turnout was high and the public gave their verdict,” she added.The outcome triggered anger among those who wanted to remain in the EU. More than four million people have signed a petition calling for a second referendum.Gove, the intellectual face of the “Leave” campaign, said has also said he would “not be dictated to on the timetable” and would only begin talks when it was “right for Britain”.The five leadership candidates will be whittled down to two by a series of ballots by Conservative MPs in the coming days before being put to a vote of party members.The winner will be announced on September 9, and will become prime minister with no need for a new election.The power struggle between Gove and Johnson brought comparisons to Shakespearean tragedies, with one MP likening Gove’s actions to those of a murderous Macbeth.

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