Showing posts with label May pledges bold new future for Britain outside EU. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 July 2016

May pledges bold new future for Britain outside EU

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Ms. May, 59, is Britain's second female Prime Minister and the thirteenth of 90-year-old Queen Elizabeth's rule. 

In her first comments as Prime Minister, Theresa May said she needed to construct a superior nation that worked for every one of its subjects and would fight to keep the United Kingdom together. 

Ruler Elizabeth II welcomed Conservative Party pioneer Ms. May to shape another administration in a crowd of people at Buckingham Palace not long after David Cameron tendered his renunciation to the ruler. 

Mr. Cameron chose to venture down following six years as chief after the June 23 submission on Britain's enrollment of the European Union, in which 17.4 million individuals voted to leave the alliance. 

"Taking after the submission, we confront a period of awesome national change and I know since we are Great Britain, we will meet people's high expectations," Ms. May said outside the head administrator's Downing Street office. 

She, similar to Mr. Cameron, had supported Britain staying in the EU. 

"As we leave the European Union, we will manufacture a strong, new, positive part for ourselves on the planet and we will make Britain a nation that works not for a favored few but rather for each one of us," she said. 

"That will be the mission of the administration I lead and together we will assemble a superior Britain." 

She likewise swore to work to hold the UK together even with dangers by Scotland's secessionist government to hold a second choice on freedom taking after the EU vote. 

A "unionist" pioneer 

A larger part in Scotland voted in favor of Britain to stay in the EU. "The full title of my gathering is the Conservative and Unionist Party, and that word unionist is vital to me," Ms. May said. 

"It implies we have faith in the union: the valuable, valuable bond between England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland." 

Ms. May, 59, is Britain's second female Prime Minister and the thirteenth of 90-year-old Queen Elizabeth's rule. 

She said she needed to make "a nation that works for everybody". 

"The administration I lead will be driven not by the interests of the favored few but rather by yours. We will do all that we can to give you more control over your lives," the previous inside pastor said. 

Ms. May postured for photos with her better half Philip, a senior official at a venture store, on the progressions of 10 Downing Street, before the popular dark entryway of the Prime Minister's office. 

She was acclaimed by government employees — the customary welcome — as she ventured inside.