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Andrea Leadsom quits Conservative leadership race | |
(35 minutes later) | |
Andrea Leadsom has pulled out of the contest to become the next Conservative Party leader and UK PM - with Theresa May now set to succeed David Cameron. | |
Mrs Leadsom said she did not believe she had sufficient support to lead a "strong and stable government". | |
She also said a nine-week leadership campaign at such a "critical time" for the UK would be "highly undesirable". | |
The energy minister said Mrs May was "ideally placed" to implement Brexit, and wished her the "greatest success". | |
A source close to the energy minister told BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg "the abuse has been too great" for Mrs Leadsom during the contest. | |
Mrs Leadsom apologised to Mrs May on Monday after suggesting in a weekend newspaper interview that being a mother made her a better candidate for the job. | |
BBC assistant political editor Norman Smith said Mr Cameron's successor could now be in place "much earlier than 9 September" - which is when the contest was due to finish. | |
It will be up to the 1922 committee of Conservative MPs to decide on a revised timetable or whether Mrs May should become leader, uncontested. | |
If it was the latter, there would then have to be discussions about when she took over as prime minister from David Cameron. | |
The time between Gordon Brown winning the Labour leadership uncontested and succeeding Tony Blair as prime minister was 38 days. | |
Mrs Leadsom - who was a leading light of the Brexit campaign - made it in to the final two, alongside Mrs May - who campaigned for Remain - last week. | |
She secured the support of 84 MPs - including former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith and Boris Johnson - compared with Mrs May's 199 votes. Justice Secretary Michael Gove was eliminated after coming third. | |
There had originally been five contenders to succeed Mr Cameron, with MPs voting in two rounds to get that number down to two - with party's 150,000-strong membership to have the final say. |