Theresa May, who was the prime minister of Britain between 2016 and 2019, on Friday announced her exit from frontline politics after 27 years as a member of Parliament in the House of Commons. The 67-year-old, whose travails with getting a Brexit deal through Parliament in the wake of the June 2016 referendum ended in a forced exit from 10 Downing Street over four years ago, said she had taken the "difficult decision" to not contest in the next general election from her Maidenhead constituency in south-east England. She has been the Conservative MP for the Berkshire seat since 1997, having been elected seven times. "Since stepping down as prime minister I have enjoyed being a backbencher again and having more time to work for my constituents and champion causes close to my heart including most recently launching a Global Commission on Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking, said May in a statement to her local Maidenhead Advertiser'. These causes have been taking an increasing amount
I have grown up in the organisation, respect and accept its decision, says Nupur Sharma on her suspension from BJP
The UK urgently needs a dynamic, entrepreneurial mission-setting state to confront the triple crisis of Covid-19, rising inequality, and climate change
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson welcomed the start of a new UK-US chapter on Wednesday
Former Prime Minister Theresa May warned that the move by Boris Johnson would do untold damage to the UK
Its principles were witnessed during the Brexit debate
The outgoing PM says she felt a "mixture of pride and disappointment" and that despite having to go earlier than she wanted, she had been the "right person" for the job
The cables' publication in the Mail on Sunday newspaper came just a month after Trump enjoyed a state visit to Britain
Her hyper-activity also suggests she knows her time is running out -- and is perhaps a psychological rebound from the shock of losing the job she loved
May will remain prime minister until a new leader is chosen, likely in late July
In her conversation with Prime Minister Modi on Saturday, she praised India's democratic exercise and processes, a Downing Street spokesperson said
May had announced her resignation earlier this week and is set to formally step down as Tory leader and PM on June 7, after a three-day state visit to the UK by US President Donald Trump
Not only is Mr. Johnson a firm proponent of Brexit - albeit one who is instinctively more flexible than Mrs. May
Not only is Mr. Johnson a firm proponent of Brexit - albeit one who is instinctively more flexible than Mrs. May
May's undoing came after her final, desperate effort to win passage of her withdrawal plan in Parliament
It would be understandable to feel sympathy for anyone so isolated and vilified. I don't
There will be a crowded field for that election and the race for No 10 will be hard to predict
Britain's main political parties had campaigned to deliver the June 2016 referendum result in favour of Brexit
Brady, who chairs the Conservative Party's influential 1922 Committee of backbench lawmakers, will tell her that 70% of her members of parliament want her to resign over her handling of Brexit
At the start of May's weekly Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons, she fell short of a formal apology sought by a cross-section of Parliament in previous debates