David Cameron quit as MP
for Witney this afternoon, announcing he would stand down with immediate
effect.
The former Prime
Minister made the shock announcement today just weeks after promising to stay
in Parliament until 2020.
The Witney MP quit 10
Downing Street – which he also swore he wouldn’t do – on June 24 after a
humiliating finish on the losing side of the EU referendum.
At the time he vowed: “I
will continue with my duties as the MP for Witney. It is an enormous privilege
to serve the people of West Oxfordshire.”
But today he warned it
was “very difficult to sit as a backbencher and not be an enormous diversion
and distraction from what the government’s doing.” The full text of his
statement below…
“I spoke this morning to
the chairman of the West Oxfordshire Conservative Association and I have just
come from a meeting with my constituency agent and other members of staff.
“Having fully considered
my position over the summer, I have decided that I am going to stand down as
the Member of Parliament for Witney.
“There will now be a
by-election and I will do everything that I can to help the Conservative
candidate win that election.
“In my view, the
circumstances of my resignation as prime minister and the realities of modern
politics make it very difficult to continue on the backbenches without the risk
of becoming a diversion to the important decisions that lie ahead for my
successor in Downing Street and the Government.
“I fully support Theresa
May and have every confidence that Britain will thrive under her strong
leadership.
“It has been an honour
to serve the people of Witney and West Oxfordshire for the last 15 years. I
want to thank them for making the job of representing them such a pleasure and
a privilege.
“I would like to thank
the party workers, volunteers, councillors and supporters for all they have
done to help me.
“Our house in Dean is
the place Samantha, my children and I call home, and that will not change. I
will continue to support the local causes and charities that mean so much to me
and many others in this beautiful and enterprising part of our country.
“I now look forward to a
life outside of Westminster, but hope to continue to play a part in public
service and to make a real and useful contribution to the country I love.”
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