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PM announces resignation following victory for leave supporters after divisive referendum
campaign
Fri 24 Jun 2016 10.44 BST First published on Fri 24 Jun 2016 08.23 BST
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David Cameron has resigned, bringing an abrupt end to his six-year premiership, after the British
public took the momentous decision to reject his entreaties and turn their back on the European
Union.
Just a year after he clinched a surprise majority in the general election, a visibly emotional
Cameron, standing outside Number 10 on Friday morning alongside his wife, Samantha, said:
“The will of the British people is an instruction that must be delivered.”
The prime minister campaigned hard in the divisive referendum on Britain’s relationship with
the EU, appearing at hundreds of public events up and down the country to argue that Brexit
would be an act of “economic self-harm”.
But a frustrated electorate used the poll to reject the status quo and, as the Ukip leader, Nigel
Farage, described it, “stick two fingers up” at Britain’s politicians.
“I was absolutely clear about my belief that Britain is stronger, safer and better off inside the EU.
I made clear the referendum was about this, and this alone, not the future of any single politician,
including myself.
“But the British people made a different decision to take a different path. As such I think the
country requires fresh leadership to take it in this direction,” Cameron said.
The prime minister’s team were left shocked and distraught by the narrow win for leave, with
52% of the vote, after polls had suggested a move towards a comfortable margin for remain in
the final few days of campaigning.
In the statement announcing his intention to step down, Cameron highlighted the key
achievements of his premiership, including rebuilding the economy after the financial crisis and
legislating to allow gay marriage.
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The process of choosing his successor will now begin, with Tory MPs selecting a two-person
shortlist, which will then be presented to the party’s members in the country to make a final
decision.
Cameron called the referendum as a calculated gamble, aimed at silencing the Eurosceptics in his
own party for a generation.
Yet he had underestimated the backing Vote Leave would receive on his own backbenches; and
reckoned without the charismatic and popular former mayor of London, Boris Johnson,
becoming its figurehead.
Johnson, whose support among the Tory membership shot up after he declared himself for out, is
now widely seen as the most likely successor to the prime minister.
The former mayor of London insisted on Friday there was “no need for haste” in negotiating
Britain’s exit. Speaking at Vote Leave’s headquarters, Johnson struck a statesmanlike tone,
paying tribute to Cameron’s leadership. “This does not mean that the UK will be in any way less
united; nor indeed does it mean that it will be any less European,” he said.
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Michael Gove, speaking alongside Johnson, said representatives from all parts of Britain, and
from different political traditions, should be involved in the negotiations.
Cameron said it would be best for his successor to negotiate the terms of Britain’s exit – and to
trigger article 50 of the Lisbon treaty, which begins the formal process of withdrawal, adding
that he had already discussed his intentions with the Queen.
The prime minister promised to stay on until the autumn, to “steady the ship”; but suggested a
new leader should be in place by the start of the Conservative party’s conference in October.
Other leading Brexiters may fancy their chances against Johnson, including Andrea Leadsom,
Liam Fox, Priti Patel and Dominic Raab.
Michael Gove, the justice secretary, has always strongly denied he wants the top job but has
consistently polled well in surveys of grassroots Conservatives in recent months.
Party modernisers are likely to rally around an alternative candidate – perhaps Theresa May,
Stephen Crabb or Nicky Morgan – in an effort to stop Johnson and other leave campaigners, who
tend to be on the right of the party.
George Osborne’s chances of succeeding the prime minister are effectively over after he fought
so forcefully alongside Cameron to remain in the EU.
The scale of anger about the chancellor’s role in the campaign was laid bare when more than 60
Tory MP said they would refuse to back the “Brexit budget” he said would be necessary if
Britain voted to leave.
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A narrow victory for remain early in the night for Newcastle, which had been expected to reject
Brexit by a stronger margin, set the pattern for later results. There was a sharp divide across
Britain, with London and other major cities, and Scotland, voting to remain in the EU, while
smaller towns and more deprived economic areas backed Brexit.
Cameron and Osborne – who were both closely involved in running the campaign – wheeled out
an array of global policymakers and experts, including the governor of the Bank of England,
Mark Carney, and the US president, Barack Obama, to make the case that leaving the EU would
inflict severe economic damage.
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But Gove caught the public mood when he said the public had had enough of “experts”.
The London stock market plunged at the start of trading at 8am on Friday, as a wave of selling
swept the City amid fears about the economic consequences of Britain trying to survive outside
the EU single market.
The FTSE 100 plunged by 550 points at one stage, a fall of 8.6%. But the blue-chip index then
stabilised, and is currently down 327 points, or 5.2%, at 6009 after Cameron’s statement.
The pound has clawed back from its worst lows, but is still down 7.5% at $1.375 against the US
dollar. It has lost 13 cents since the polls closed on Thursday night, when opinion polls suggested
a remain victory.
A Whitehall source said the first priority for Cameron’s post-Brexit administration was to steady
the financial markets by ensuring that there would be a smooth transition to a new prime
minister.
To that end, there has already been “contact” between Downing Street with both Boris Johnson
and Michael Gove, the source said. David Cameron is expected to arrange a meeting with both,
which “will be awkward to say the least”, within the next 48 hours.
Cameron’s statement was expected to be delivered at 7am but it finally came after 8.15am, a
quarter of an hour after the markets opened. Labour will hold a shadow cabinet meeting on
Friday morning to calibrate its response.
Topics
David Cameron
Brexit
Conservatives
Foreign policy
European Union
Europe
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