Cameron becomes Prime Minister as Brown quits

12 May, 2010

David Cameron became Britain's new prime minister Tuesday, breaking five days of deadlock after last week's inconclusive general election and becoming the first Conservative premier for 13 years. Cameron was invited to form a government by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace after Gordon Brown resigned amid expectation that the Conservatives will forge a power-sharing deal with the Liberal Democrats.
Brown announced his decision in a statement delivered to a scrum of journalists outside Downing Street, his voice cracking with emotion. "I've informed the Queen's private secretary that it is my intention to tender my resignation to the Queen," Brown said. "In the event that the Queen accepts I shall advise her to invite the leader of the opposition (Cameron) to seek to form a government. I wish the next prime minister well as he makes the important choices for the future."
Immediately afterwards, he and his wife Sarah were driven from Downing Street to Buckingham Palace for Brown to offer his resignation to the Queen, which was accepted in a 15-minute meeting. Some 40 minutes later, Cameron - at 43 Britain's youngest prime minister for around two centuries - arrived at the palace with his pregnant wife Samantha for a ceremony with the Queen known as the kissing of hands.
They left for Downing Street after 25 minutes, their chauffeur-driven Jaguar car, attracting toots and waves from passing vehicles. In last Thursday's general election, the Conservatives won 306 seats in the 650-member House of Commons - 20 short of a clear majority of 326 - followed by Labour on 258 and the Lib Dems on 57.
After five days of talks between Nick Clegg's Lib Dems and Tories - and briefly between the Lib Dems and Labour - there was no immediate announcement of a deal, although it could come within hours. But several Labour lawmakers have effectively conceded to Cameron and the BBC cited a senior Lib Dem official as saying the power-sharing offer from David Cameron's Conservatives was now "the only deal in town."
The party declined to comment formally. Tory and Liberal Democrat negotiators emerged after hours of talks late Tuesday and said they were now going to consult their parties. Brown wished Cameron well as he departed from top-level politics, while acknowledging the personal weaknesses - such as poor presentational skills and impatience - which hampered his three-year premiership. "Only those who have held the office of prime minister can understand the full weight of its responsibilities and its great capacity for good," Brown said.

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