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After unsuccessful bids for the House of Commons in 1992 and 1994 (she stood in safe Labour seats both times -- North West Durham and Barking, respectively), she was elected as the MP for Maidenhead in the 1997 general election. From 1999 to 2010, May served in several roles in the Shadow Cabinets of William Hague, Iain Duncan Smith, Michael Howard, and UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, including Shadow Transport Secretary and Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary. She was also Chair of the Conservative Party (the first woman to serve as such) from 2002 to 2003. It was in the latter role that she first came to attention, when she publicly acknowledged and expressed a desire to change the Conservatives' reputation as being the "Nasty Party" for holding on to bigoted anti-minority attitudes and hardline free-market policies that were increasingly unpopular with the electorate. This speech was subsequently credited with starting a move to more moderate Conservatism that began during Howard's leadership and gathered steam after Cameron took over.

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After unsuccessful bids for the House of Commons in 1992 and 1994 (she stood in safe Labour seats both times -- North West Durham and Barking, respectively), she was elected as the MP for the newly defined constituency of Maidenhead in the 1997 general election. From 1999 to 2010, May served in several roles in the Shadow Cabinets of William Hague, Iain Duncan Smith, Michael Howard, and UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, including Shadow Transport Secretary and Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary. She was also Chair of the Conservative Party (the first woman to serve as such) from 2002 to 2003. It was in the latter role that she first came to attention, when she publicly acknowledged and expressed a desire to change the Conservatives' reputation as being the "Nasty Party" for holding on to bigoted anti-minority attitudes and hardline free-market policies that were increasingly unpopular with the electorate. This speech was subsequently credited with starting a move to more moderate Conservatism that began during Howard's leadership and gathered steam after Cameron took over.



Following David Cameron's resignation on 24 June 2016 in the wake of Britain's vote to leave UsefulNotes/TheEuropeanUnion, May announced her candidacy for the leadership of the Conservative Party and quickly emerged as the front-runner after the other early favourite (UsefulNotes/BorisJohnson) was betrayed by one of her Cabinet colleagues, the notoriously anti-intellectual Michael Gove, and left the race. ([[HoistByHisOwnPetard Gove was subsequently booted out of cabinet]] while Johnson would somehow get made Foreign Secretary.) May was seen by many as an ideal compromise candidate -- she had backed Remain in the referendum, albeit tepidly and apparently after some convincing, and ran as a candidate who could reunite the party, whose [=MPs=] had been allowed to campaign for Remain or Leave as they wished. She won the first ballot of Conservative [=MPs=] on 5 July by a significant margin and, two days later, won the votes of 199 [=MPs=], going forward to face a vote of Conservative Party members in a contest with Andrea Leadsom, a Minister of State for Energy. Leadsom's withdrawal from the election on 11 July (after some ill-advised comments in an interview where she essentially claimed that she'd make a better prime minister because she was a mother, whereas May was not; this was considered especially harsh due to May being unable to conceive) led to May's appointment as leader the same day. She was appointed prime minister two days later -- the second woman to reach that office, some 37 years after UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher. As a result of Leadsom's jibes, she would also be known as the first childless PM since the bachelor UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath over 40 years before.

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Following David Cameron's resignation on 24 June 2016 in the wake of Britain's vote to leave UsefulNotes/TheEuropeanUnion, May announced her candidacy for the leadership of the Conservative Party and quickly emerged as the front-runner after the other early favourite (UsefulNotes/BorisJohnson) favourite, UsefulNotes/BorisJohnson, was betrayed by one of her Cabinet colleagues, the notoriously anti-intellectual Michael Gove, and left the race. ([[HoistByHisOwnPetard Gove was subsequently booted out of cabinet]] while Johnson would somehow get made Foreign Secretary.) May was seen by many as an ideal compromise candidate -- she had backed Remain in the referendum, albeit tepidly and apparently after some convincing, and ran as a candidate who could reunite the party, whose [=MPs=] had been allowed to campaign for Remain or Leave as they wished. She won the first ballot of Conservative [=MPs=] on 5 July by a significant margin and, two days later, won the votes of 199 [=MPs=], going forward to face a vote of Conservative Party members in a contest with Andrea Leadsom, a Minister of State for Energy. Leadsom's withdrawal from the election on 11 July (after some ill-advised comments in an interview where she essentially claimed that she'd make a better prime minister because she was a mother, whereas May was not; this was considered especially harsh due to May being unable to conceive) led to May's appointment as leader the same day. She was appointed prime minister two days later -- the second woman to reach that office, some 37 years after UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher. As a result of Leadsom's jibes, she would also be known as the first childless PM since the bachelor UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath over 40 years before.


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On 8 March 2024, she announced her intention to retire from the House at the next general election. She promised to focus her post-political activities on campaigning against human trafficking and modern slavery.
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The situation did not improve for May. In January 2019, her Brexit deal was voted down in the Commons in the worst defeat any democratic government in the UK has ever suffered (202–432, a difference of 230 votes against).[[note]]For perspective, the short-lived first Labour government led by UsefulNotes/RamsayMacDonald had suffered the previous biggest defeat, 198–364, on a confidence matter related directly to [[RedScare fears of Communist influence in the government]]. And Labour wasn't even the biggest party in Parliament at the time.[[/note]] And with the clock running down, the Prime Minister not backing down from her rigid approach, the European Research Group's constant rebellions, Labour's consistent opposition unless some red lines were dropped, and the EU's unwillingness to renegotiate made her life more difficult every day. Two more heavy defeats on the deal made Mrs May accept a delay in the EU exit date from 29 March to 31 October, forcing the UK to participate in that year's European Parliament elections in late May and helping lower her approval ratings to the lowest any UK prime minister has had since organised polling began.[[note]]Thus, alongside UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush, she has the odd distinction of earning both the highest and the lowest approval ratings for a leader of their respective countries.[[/note]] This, along with the Conservative Party suffering a heavy defeat in the local elections at the start of May 2019, made her position somehow even more untenable than it already was, to the point where the party management were allegedly ready to scrap the rule protecting her from further leadership challenges until December -- forcing her at last to bow to the inevitable.

On 24 May, the day after the European elections (in which the Conservatives came in '''fifth'''), she announced her resignation from the premiership effective on 7 June, necessitating a leadership race, in which her [[TheStarscream old lurking nemesis]] Boris Johnson was again the frontrunner and ultimately won. This, incidentally, made her the ''fourth'' Conservative prime minister in a row whose downfall was related in some way to the European Union. It also made her the first PM to take over partway through a mandate somebody else won, win one of their own, and resign during that mandate since UsefulNotes/HaroldMacmillan.

Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor, and the chaotic and record-breakingly short government of ''his'' successor --and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, possibly acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to stand only in non-Conservative seats while focusing on splitting Labour's vote in its pro-Brexit 'heartland' constituencies). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years. However, the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this, which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK's economy, showed some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol would be unresolved until the Windsor Agreement was passed in early 2023, almost four years after she left office. Of the three former [=PMs=] in the House, she was the only one to vote in favour of its passage.

May chose to stand for re-election to her constituency seat in the 2019 general election, and was duly returned. She is the first former PM to seek re-election to the Commons after having been removed from power since UsefulNotes/JamesCallaghan in 1983.[[note]]UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath, who had been ex-PM since 1974 and was in the midst of "the longest sulk in history", was also still serving in Parliament at this time -- and would remain in his Commons seat until 2001, long after 1987, when Callaghan retired and was elevated to the Lords.[[/note]] During Johnson's premiership she was the only former PM in either house of Parliament and the only living female former PM too (since Thatcher died before she even reached the position,[[note]]May was actually very keen on being the first woman PM in her youth and was disappointed that Thatcher beat her to that distinction.[[/note]] and the third, Johnson's immediate successor UsefulNotes/LizTruss, served in autumn 2022 ... for [[ShortLivedLeadership six and a half weeks]]). Like Edward Heath before her, she gained a reputation as a vocal backbench critic of her successor, though she did vote in favour of both Johnson's renegotiated Withdrawal Agreement and the subsequent UK–EU Free Trade Agreement despite critiquing them heavily. Notably, when Boris Johnson was forced to resign three years later following a series of scandals and got a standing ovation at the end of his last [=PMQs=], Theresa May refused to stand and clap.

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The situation did not improve for May. In January 2019, her Brexit deal was voted down in the Commons in the worst defeat any democratic government in the UK has ever suffered (202–432, a difference of 230 votes against).[[note]]For perspective, the short-lived first Labour government led by UsefulNotes/RamsayMacDonald had suffered the previous biggest defeat, 198–364, on a confidence matter related directly to [[RedScare fears of Communist influence in the government]]. And Labour wasn't even the biggest party in Parliament at the time.[[/note]] And with With the clock running down, the Prime Minister not backing down from her rigid approach, the European Research Group's constant rebellions, Labour's consistent opposition unless some red lines were dropped, and the EU's unwillingness to renegotiate made her life more difficult every day. Two more heavy defeats on the deal made Mrs May accept a delay in the EU exit date from 29 March to 31 October, forcing the UK to participate in that year's European Parliament elections in late May and helping lower her approval ratings to the lowest any UK prime minister has had since organised polling began.[[note]]Thus, alongside UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush, she has the odd distinction of earning both the highest and the lowest approval ratings for a leader of their respective countries.[[/note]] This, along with the Conservative Party suffering a heavy defeat in the local elections at the start of May 2019, made her position somehow even more untenable than it already was, to as the point where Conservatives were slipping to fourth place in opinion polls. It was the first time since before Thatcher's well-received actions in UsefulNotes/TheFalklandsWar helped turn around her premiership that they were lower than second. Conservative party management were allegedly ready to scrap the rule protecting her from further leadership challenges until December -- December, forcing her at last to bow to the inevitable.

On 24 May, the day after the European elections (in which the Conservatives came in '''fifth'''), '''fifth'''[[note]]On only 8.8 per cent of the vote and four seats, with their leader Sir Ashley Fox getting unseated. It was the party's worst result ever in a UK-wide election and the first time they placed lower than second.[[/note]]), she announced her resignation from the premiership effective on 7 June, necessitating a leadership race, in which her [[TheStarscream old lurking nemesis]] Boris Johnson was again the frontrunner and ultimately won. This, incidentally, made her the ''fourth'' Conservative prime minister in a row whose downfall was related in some way to the European Union. It also made her the first PM to take over partway through a mandate somebody else won, win one of their own, and resign during that mandate since UsefulNotes/HaroldMacmillan.

Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even worst" -- even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor, and the chaotic and record-breakingly short government of ''his'' successor --and -- and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to on par with his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, possibly acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to stand only in non-Conservative seats while focusing on splitting Labour's vote in its pro-Brexit 'heartland' constituencies). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years. However, the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this, which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK's economy, showed some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol would be unresolved until the Windsor Agreement was passed in early 2023, almost four years after she left office. Of the three former [=PMs=] in the House, she was the only one to vote in favour of its passage.

May chose to stand for re-election to her constituency seat in the 2019 general election, and was duly returned. She is was the first former PM to seek re-election to the Commons after having been removed from lost power since UsefulNotes/JamesCallaghan in 1983.[[note]]UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath, who had been ex-PM since 1974 and was in the midst of "the longest sulk in history", was also still serving in Parliament at this time -- and would remain in his Commons seat until 2001, long after 1987, when Callaghan retired and was elevated to the Lords.[[/note]] During Johnson's premiership she was the only former PM in either house of Parliament and the only living female former PM too (since Thatcher died before she even reached the position,[[note]]May was actually very keen on being the first woman PM in her youth and was disappointed that Thatcher beat her to that distinction.[[/note]] and the third, Johnson's immediate successor UsefulNotes/LizTruss, served in autumn 2022 ... for [[ShortLivedLeadership six and a half weeks]]). Like Edward Heath before her, she gained a reputation as a vocal backbench critic of her successor, though she did vote in favour of both Johnson's renegotiated Withdrawal Agreement and the subsequent UK–EU Free Trade Agreement despite critiquing them heavily. Notably, when Boris Johnson was forced to resign three years later in 2022 following a series of scandals and got a standing ovation at the end of his last [=PMQs=], Theresa May refused to stand and clap.
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Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor, and the chaotic and record-breakingly short government of ''his'' successor --and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, possibly acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to stand only in non-Conservative seats while focusing on splitting Labour's vote in its pro-Brexit 'heartland' constituencies). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years. However, the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this, which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK's economy, showed some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.

to:

Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor, and the chaotic and record-breakingly short government of ''his'' successor --and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, possibly acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to stand only in non-Conservative seats while focusing on splitting Labour's vote in its pro-Brexit 'heartland' constituencies). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years. However, the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this, which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK's economy, showed some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.
would be unresolved until the Windsor Agreement was passed in early 2023, almost four years after she left office. Of the three former [=PMs=] in the House, she was the only one to vote in favour of its passage.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor--and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, possibly acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to stand only in non-Conservative seats while focusing on splitting Labour's vote in its pro-Brexit 'heartland' constituencies). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years. However, the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this, which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK's economy, showed some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.

to:

Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor--and successor, and the chaotic and record-breakingly short government of ''his'' successor --and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, possibly acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to stand only in non-Conservative seats while focusing on splitting Labour's vote in its pro-Brexit 'heartland' constituencies). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years. However, the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this, which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK's economy, showed some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.
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After unsuccessful bids for the House of Commons in 1992 and 1994 (she stood in safe Labour seats both times -- North West Durham and Barking, respectively), she was elected as the MP for Maidenhead in the 1997 general election. From 1999 to 2010, May served in several roles in the Shadow Cabinets of William Hague, Iain Duncan Smith, Michael Howard, and UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, including Shadow Transport Secretary and Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary. She was also Chair of the Conservative Party (the first woman to serve as such) from 2002 to 2003. It was in the latter role that she first came to attention, when she publicly acknowleged and expressed a desire to change the Conservatives' reputation as being the "Nasty Party" for holding on to bigoted anti-minority attitudes and hardline free-market policies that were increasingly unpopular with the electorate. This speech was subsequently credited with starting a move to more moderate Conservatism that began during Howard's leadership and gathered steam after Cameron took over.

After the formation of a Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition government following the 2010 general election, led by new Prime Minister Cameron, May was appointed Home Secretary and Minister for Women and Equalities, giving up the latter role in 2012. Reappointed after the Conservatives' outright victory in the [[UsefulNotes/UnitedKingdomGeneralElection2015 2015 general election]], she went on to become the longest-serving Home secretary since James Chuter Ede held the post for the entirety of UsefulNotes/ClementAttlee's government over 60 years before, from 1945 to 1951.

to:

After unsuccessful bids for the House of Commons in 1992 and 1994 (she stood in safe Labour seats both times -- North West Durham and Barking, respectively), she was elected as the MP for Maidenhead in the 1997 general election. From 1999 to 2010, May served in several roles in the Shadow Cabinets of William Hague, Iain Duncan Smith, Michael Howard, and UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, including Shadow Transport Secretary and Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary. She was also Chair of the Conservative Party (the first woman to serve as such) from 2002 to 2003. It was in the latter role that she first came to attention, when she publicly acknowleged acknowledged and expressed a desire to change the Conservatives' reputation as being the "Nasty Party" for holding on to bigoted anti-minority attitudes and hardline free-market policies that were increasingly unpopular with the electorate. This speech was subsequently credited with starting a move to more moderate Conservatism that began during Howard's leadership and gathered steam after Cameron took over.

After the formation of a Conservative/Liberal Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government following the 2010 general election, led by new Prime Minister Cameron, Cameron as prime minister, May was appointed Home Secretary and Minister for Women and Equalities, giving up the latter role in 2012. Reappointed after the Conservatives' outright victory in the [[UsefulNotes/UnitedKingdomGeneralElection2015 2015 general election]], she went on to become the longest-serving Home home secretary since James Chuter Ede held the post for the entirety of UsefulNotes/ClementAttlee's government over 60 years before, from 1945 to 1951.



On 18 April 2017, May announced a snap general election to be held on 8 June, which was a turnaround from a previous statement saying she wouldn't hold one. It didn't go exactly to plan. At the time this was seen as a smart move, as Labour was divided and had a deeply unpopular leader, the SNP was only concerned with Scotland, the Liberal Democrats had lost all but eight seats in 2015, and UKIP had lost all sense of direction with their ostensible purpose fulfilled and it was anticipated the Conservatives would take most of the 3.8 million votes they got in 2015. With the Conservatives leading in the polls by over twenty percentage points early in the campaign, and the local elections that took place a month before the general election resulting in substantial Conservative gains, all signs suggested she would win a {{landslide|Election}} mandate and get a stronger hand for Brexit, with some predicting that the Tories would earn their most seats since before UsefulNotes/WorldWarII.

However, Labour rallied and united under Jeremy Corbyn (who made an unexpectedly good impression on the electorate during the campaign, partly because his opponents tried the self-contradictory strategy of simultaneously mocking him as a pathetic, senile old man and depicting him as a terrifying communist threat to Our Way of Life), and despite Brexit looming and continuing urgent issues like the NHS crisis and school funding, the Conservatives made headlines for a bizarre manifesto that included such policies as bringing back fox-hunting and proposing to force the homes of elderly people getting government-funded social care to be sold after their deaths to reclaim the money (derisively [[FanNickname nicknamed]] the "dementia tax"). May's refusal to participate in televised leadership debates,[[note]]She emulated Cameron's 2015 campaign strategy, which worked because then-Labour leader Ed Miliband was a notoriously poor public speaker and duly got ripped apart by UKIP leader Nigel Farage and SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon in the debates. However, his successor Corbyn was a more seasoned debater, Sturgeon was ideologically closer to Corbyn than she was to Miliband and so didn't criticise him as much, while Farage had been replaced by Paul Nuttall, who wasn't nearly as good a debater and was also reeling from a botched attempt to get into Parliament via a by-election.[[/note]] her constant attacks on Labour, and her 'robotic' repetition of soundbites like ''"Strong and stable leadership"'' progressively ate away at the Tory lead in the polls. The tragic terrorist attacks in London and Manchester brought further criticism over her decision to cut the numbers of police officers during her time as Home secretary, as well as a suggestion she could curb human rights. In the end, the Conservatives actually lost their majority in the House of Commons, falling short by nine seats. Labour, on the other hand, gained a net 30 seats -- some in places that had been safe Conservative seats for over a century -- and even the Liberal Democrats managed a small but significant fightback. The only good news was in Scotland, where the Conservatives won 12 seats from the SNP (who had achieved a near clean-sweep in 2015, reducing each of the top nationwide parties to having returned just one MP) and thus had multiple Scottish [=MPs=] for the first time in two decades -- though this was credited almost entirely to the popularity of the Scottish Conservatives' leader, Ruth Davidson.

To secure a very slim majority in the House of Commons, May entered into a 'confidence and supply agreement' with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) from Northern Ireland (its ten [=MPs=] would vote with the Tories in return for concessions, with no seats in cabinet) and sought permission from UsefulNotes/HMTheQueen to form a government. This caused enormous backlash throughout the UK as more socially liberal people decried the DUP's hardline social policies (including wanting to roll back, among other things, abortion rights and gay rights) and the possibility that having the DUP enter into an agreement with the Conservatives could be construed as a violation of [[UsefulNotes/TheTroubles the Good Friday Agreement]]. The Tories eventually did form a government with DUP backing, although cracks began showing within the British conservative movement and May's inability to enforce discipline within her party became increasingly apparent.

May was further criticized after her government decided to give £1.5 billion to Northern Ireland at the DUP's instigation (despite previously loudly insisting that the government had no money to provide NHS workers with a pay raise), which many people saw as a bribe which would damage the balance of power in Northern Ireland. As if to make things even worse, her refusal to meet with survivors of London's Grenfell Tower fire disaster over 'security concerns' brought a further barrage of criticism -- not helped by Jeremy Corbyn, the Queen, and Prince William all visiting without any issue. Her leadership abilities were further called into question as ministers like Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson began very publicly making statements that seemed to go against her own positions while others, like Defence Secretary Michael Fallon, were caught in the wave of sexual scandals of 2017 and forced to step down.

Her weakness as a leader was only reinforced, in the eyes of many, during a disastrous Conservative Party Conference where during her keynote speech the backdrop fell apart; she began coughing so badly that Phillip Hammond, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, had to step in and hand her a cough sweet; and a prankster came up to the stage and handed her a [=P45=] form,[[note]]This is the form used in the UK when an employee leaves a company -- "[=P45=]" has become slang for being terminated. The American equivalent would be a pink slip.[[/note]] saying it was [[HarsherInHindsight from Boris]].

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On 18 April 2017, May announced a snap general election to be held on 8 June, which was a turnaround from a previous statement saying she wouldn't hold one. It didn't go exactly to plan. At the time this was seen as a smart move, as Labour was divided and had a deeply unpopular leader, the SNP Scottish National Party (SNP) was only concerned with Scotland, the Liberal Democrats had lost all but eight seats in 2015, and UKIP had lost all sense of direction with their ostensible purpose fulfilled and it was anticipated the Conservatives would take most of the 3.8 million votes they got in 2015. With the Conservatives leading in the polls by over twenty percentage points early in the campaign, and the local elections that took place a month before the general election resulting in substantial Conservative gains, all signs suggested she would win a {{landslide|Election}} mandate and get a stronger hand for Brexit, with some predicting that the Tories would earn their most seats since before UsefulNotes/WorldWarII.

However, Labour rallied and united under Jeremy Corbyn (who made an unexpectedly good impression on the electorate during the campaign, partly because his opponents tried the self-contradictory strategy of simultaneously mocking him as a pathetic, senile old man and depicting him as a terrifying communist threat to Our Way of Life), and despite Brexit looming and continuing urgent issues like the NHS crisis and school funding, the Conservatives made headlines for a bizarre manifesto that included such policies as bringing back fox-hunting and proposing to force the homes of elderly people getting government-funded social care to be sold after their deaths to reclaim the money (derisively [[FanNickname nicknamed]] the "dementia tax"). May's refusal to participate in televised leadership debates,[[note]]She emulated Cameron's 2015 campaign strategy, which worked because then-Labour leader Ed Miliband was a notoriously poor public speaker and duly got ripped apart by UKIP leader Nigel Farage and SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon in the debates. However, his successor Corbyn was a more seasoned debater, Sturgeon was ideologically closer to Corbyn than she was to Miliband and so didn't criticise him as much, while Farage had been replaced by Paul Nuttall, who wasn't nearly as good a debater and was also reeling from a botched attempt to get into Parliament via a by-election.[[/note]] her constant attacks on Labour, and her 'robotic' repetition of soundbites like ''"Strong and stable leadership"'' progressively ate away at the Tory lead in the polls. The tragic terrorist attacks in London and Manchester brought further criticism over her decision to cut the numbers of police officers during her time as Home secretary, Secretary, as well as a suggestion she could curb human rights. In the end, the Conservatives actually lost their majority in the House of Commons, falling short by nine seats. Labour, on the other hand, gained a net 30 seats -- some in places that had been safe Conservative seats for over a century -- and even the Liberal Democrats managed a small but significant fightback. The only good news was in Scotland, where the Conservatives won 12 seats from the SNP (who had achieved a near clean-sweep in 2015, reducing each of the top nationwide parties to having returned just one MP) and thus had multiple Scottish [=MPs=] for the first time in two decades -- though this was credited almost entirely to the popularity of the Scottish Conservatives' leader, Ruth Davidson.

To secure a very slim majority in the House of Commons, May entered into a 'confidence and supply agreement' with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) from Northern Ireland (its ten [=MPs=] would vote with the Tories in return for concessions, with no seats in cabinet) and sought permission from UsefulNotes/HMTheQueen Queen UsefulNotes/ElizabethII to form a government. This caused enormous backlash throughout the UK as more socially liberal people decried the DUP's hardline social policies (including wanting to roll back, among other things, abortion rights and gay rights) and the possibility that having the DUP enter into an agreement with the Conservatives could be construed as a violation of [[UsefulNotes/TheTroubles the Good Friday Agreement]]. The Tories eventually did form a government with DUP backing, although cracks began showing within the British conservative movement and May's inability to enforce discipline within her party became increasingly apparent.

May was further criticized criticised after her government decided to give £1.5 billion to Northern Ireland at the DUP's instigation (despite previously loudly insisting that the government had no money to provide NHS workers with a pay raise), which many people saw as a bribe which would damage the balance of power in Northern Ireland. As if to make things even worse, her refusal to meet with survivors of London's Grenfell Tower fire disaster over 'security concerns' brought a further barrage of criticism -- not helped by Jeremy Corbyn, the Queen, and Prince William all visiting without any issue. Her leadership abilities were further called into question as ministers like Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson began very publicly making statements that seemed to go against her own positions while others, like Defence Secretary Michael Fallon, were caught in the wave of sexual scandals of 2017 and forced to step down.

Her weakness as a leader was only reinforced, in the eyes of many, during a disastrous Conservative Party Conference where during her keynote speech the backdrop fell apart; she began coughing so badly that Phillip Philip Hammond, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, had to step in and hand her a cough sweet; and a prankster came up to the stage and handed her a [=P45=] form,[[note]]This is the form used in the UK when an employee leaves a company -- "[=P45=]" has become slang for being terminated. The American equivalent would be a pink slip.[[/note]] saying it was [[HarsherInHindsight from Boris]].



Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor--and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he actually ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to only stand in non-Conservative seats while focusing on draining votes from traditional Labour orders). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years. However, the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this, which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK's economy, showed some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.

May chose to stand for re-election to her constituency seat in the 2019 general election, and was duly returned. She is the first former PM to seek re-election to the Commons after having been removed from power since UsefulNotes/JamesCallaghan in 1983.[[note]]UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath, who had been ex-PM since 1974 and was in the midst of "the longest sulk in history", was also still serving in Parliament at this time -- and would remain in his Commons seat until 2001, long after 1987, when Callaghan retired and was elevated to the Lords.[[/note]] During Johnson's premiership she was the only former PM in either house of Parliament, and she is the only living female former PM (since Thatcher died before she even reached the position,[[note]]May was actually very keen on being the first woman PM in her youth and was disappointed that Thatcher beat her to that distinction.[[/note]] and the third, Johnson's immediate successor UsefulNotes/LizTruss, is the incumbent as of 2022). Like Edward Heath before her, she gained a reputation as a vocal backbench critic of her successor, though she did vote in favour of both the renegotiated Withdrawal Agreement and then the subsequent UK–EU Free Trade Agreement despite critiquing it heavily. Notably, when Boris Johnson was forced to resign three years later following a series of scandals and was given a standing ovation at the end of his last [=PMQs=], Theresa May refused to stand and clap.

to:

Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor--and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he actually ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, possibly acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to only stand only in non-Conservative seats while focusing on draining votes from traditional Labour orders).splitting Labour's vote in its pro-Brexit 'heartland' constituencies). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years. However, the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this, which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK's economy, showed some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.

May chose to stand for re-election to her constituency seat in the 2019 general election, and was duly returned. She is the first former PM to seek re-election to the Commons after having been removed from power since UsefulNotes/JamesCallaghan in 1983.[[note]]UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath, who had been ex-PM since 1974 and was in the midst of "the longest sulk in history", was also still serving in Parliament at this time -- and would remain in his Commons seat until 2001, long after 1987, when Callaghan retired and was elevated to the Lords.[[/note]] During Johnson's premiership she was the only former PM in either house of Parliament, Parliament and she is the only living female former PM too (since Thatcher died before she even reached the position,[[note]]May was actually very keen on being the first woman PM in her youth and was disappointed that Thatcher beat her to that distinction.[[/note]] and the third, Johnson's immediate successor UsefulNotes/LizTruss, is the incumbent as of 2022). served in autumn 2022 ... for [[ShortLivedLeadership six and a half weeks]]). Like Edward Heath before her, she gained a reputation as a vocal backbench critic of her successor, though she did vote in favour of both the Johnson's renegotiated Withdrawal Agreement and then the subsequent UK–EU Free Trade Agreement despite critiquing it them heavily. Notably, when Boris Johnson was forced to resign three years later following a series of scandals and was given got a standing ovation at the end of his last [=PMQs=], Theresa May refused to stand and clap.
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After the formation of a Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition government following the 2010 general election, led by new Prime Minister Cameron, May was appointed Home Secretary and Minister for Women and Equalities, giving up the latter role in 2012. Reappointed after the Conservatives' outright victory in the [[UsefulNotes/UnitedKingdomGeneralElection2015 2015 general election]], she went on to become the longest-serving Home secretary since James Chuter Ede held the post for the entirety of UsefulNotes/ClementAttlee's 1945–51 government over 60 years before.

to:

After the formation of a Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition government following the 2010 general election, led by new Prime Minister Cameron, May was appointed Home Secretary and Minister for Women and Equalities, giving up the latter role in 2012. Reappointed after the Conservatives' outright victory in the [[UsefulNotes/UnitedKingdomGeneralElection2015 2015 general election]], she went on to become the longest-serving Home secretary since James Chuter Ede held the post for the entirety of UsefulNotes/ClementAttlee's 1945–51 government over 60 years before.
before, from 1945 to 1951.



On 18 April 2017, May announced a snap general election to be held on 8 June, which was a turnaround from a previous statement saying she wouldn't hold one. It didn't go exactly to plan. At the time this was seen as a smart move, as Labour was divided and had a deeply unpopular leader, the SNP was chiefly concerned with Scotland, the Liberal Democrats had lost all but eight seats in 2015, and UKIP had lost all sense of direction with their ostensible purpose fulfilled and it was anticipated the Conservatives would take most of the 3.8 million votes they got in 2015. With the Conservatives leading in the polls by over twenty percentage points early in the campaign, and the local elections that took place a month before the general election resulting in substantial Conservative gains, all signs suggested she would win a {{landslide|Election}} mandate and get a stronger hand for Brexit, with some predicting that the Tories would earn their most seats since before UsefulNotes/WorldWarII.

However, Labour rallied and united under Jeremy Corbyn (who made an unexpectedly good impression on the electorate during the campaign, partly because his opponents tried the self-contradictory strategy of simultaneously mocking him as a pathetic, senile old man and depicting him as a terrifying communist threat to Our Way of Life), and despite Brexit looming and continuing urgent issues like the NHS crisis and school funding, the Conservatives made headlines for a bizarre manifesto that included such policies as bringing back fox-hunting and proposing to force the homes of elderly people getting government-funded social care to be sold after their deaths to reclaim the money (derisively [[FanNickname nicknamed]] the "dementia tax"). May's refusal to participate in televised leadership debates,[[note]]She emulated Cameron's 2015 campaign strategy, which worked because then-Labour leader Ed Miliband was a notoriously poor public speaker and duly got ripped apart by UKIP leader Nigel Farage and SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon in the debates. However, his successor Corbyn was a more seasoned debater, Sturgeon was ideologically closer to Corbyn than she was to Miliband and so didn't criticise him as much, while Farage had been replaced by Paul Nuttall, who wasn't nearly as good a debater and was also reeling from a botched attempt to get into Parliament via a by-election.[[/note]] her constant attacks on Labour, and her 'robotic' repetition of soundbites like ''"Strong and stable leadership"'' progressively ate away at the Tory lead in the polls. The tragic terrorist attacks in London and Manchester brought further criticism over her decision to cut the numbers of police officers during her time as Home secretary, as well as a suggestion she could curb human rights. In the end, the Conservatives actually lost their majority in the House of Commons, falling short by nine seats. Labour, on the other hand, gained a net 30 seats -- some in places that had been safe Conservative seats for over a century -- and even the Liberal Democrats managed a small but significant fightback. The only good news was in Scotland, where the Conservatives won 12 seats from the SNP (who had achieved a near clean-sweep in 2015, reducing each of the top nationwide parties to having returned just one MP) and thus had multiple Scottish [=MPs=] for the first time in two decades -- though this was credited almost entirely to the popularity of the Scottish Conservatives' leader Ruth Davidson.

to:

On 18 April 2017, May announced a snap general election to be held on 8 June, which was a turnaround from a previous statement saying she wouldn't hold one. It didn't go exactly to plan. At the time this was seen as a smart move, as Labour was divided and had a deeply unpopular leader, the SNP was chiefly only concerned with Scotland, the Liberal Democrats had lost all but eight seats in 2015, and UKIP had lost all sense of direction with their ostensible purpose fulfilled and it was anticipated the Conservatives would take most of the 3.8 million votes they got in 2015. With the Conservatives leading in the polls by over twenty percentage points early in the campaign, and the local elections that took place a month before the general election resulting in substantial Conservative gains, all signs suggested she would win a {{landslide|Election}} mandate and get a stronger hand for Brexit, with some predicting that the Tories would earn their most seats since before UsefulNotes/WorldWarII.

However, Labour rallied and united under Jeremy Corbyn (who made an unexpectedly good impression on the electorate during the campaign, partly because his opponents tried the self-contradictory strategy of simultaneously mocking him as a pathetic, senile old man and depicting him as a terrifying communist threat to Our Way of Life), and despite Brexit looming and continuing urgent issues like the NHS crisis and school funding, the Conservatives made headlines for a bizarre manifesto that included such policies as bringing back fox-hunting and proposing to force the homes of elderly people getting government-funded social care to be sold after their deaths to reclaim the money (derisively [[FanNickname nicknamed]] the "dementia tax"). May's refusal to participate in televised leadership debates,[[note]]She emulated Cameron's 2015 campaign strategy, which worked because then-Labour leader Ed Miliband was a notoriously poor public speaker and duly got ripped apart by UKIP leader Nigel Farage and SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon in the debates. However, his successor Corbyn was a more seasoned debater, Sturgeon was ideologically closer to Corbyn than she was to Miliband and so didn't criticise him as much, while Farage had been replaced by Paul Nuttall, who wasn't nearly as good a debater and was also reeling from a botched attempt to get into Parliament via a by-election.[[/note]] her constant attacks on Labour, and her 'robotic' repetition of soundbites like ''"Strong and stable leadership"'' progressively ate away at the Tory lead in the polls. The tragic terrorist attacks in London and Manchester brought further criticism over her decision to cut the numbers of police officers during her time as Home secretary, as well as a suggestion she could curb human rights. In the end, the Conservatives actually lost their majority in the House of Commons, falling short by nine seats. Labour, on the other hand, gained a net 30 seats -- some in places that had been safe Conservative seats for over a century -- and even the Liberal Democrats managed a small but significant fightback. The only good news was in Scotland, where the Conservatives won 12 seats from the SNP (who had achieved a near clean-sweep in 2015, reducing each of the top nationwide parties to having returned just one MP) and thus had multiple Scottish [=MPs=] for the first time in two decades -- though this was credited almost entirely to the popularity of the Scottish Conservatives' leader leader, Ruth Davidson.



Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor--and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he actually ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to only stand in non-Conservative seats while focusing on draining votes from traditional Labour orders). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years--though the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK economy is demonstrating to some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.

May chose to stand for re-election to her constituency seat in the 2019 general election, and was duly returned. She is the first former PM to seek re-election to the Commons after having been removed from power since UsefulNotes/JamesCallaghan in 1983.[[note]]UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath, who had been ex-PM since 1974 and was in the midst of "the longest sulk in history", was also still serving in Parliament at this time -- and would remain in his seat until 2001, long after Callaghan retired and was elevated to the Lords in 1987.[[/note]] She is the only former PM in either House of Parliament, and the only living female former PM (since Thatcher died before she even reached the same position). Like UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath before her, she has been gaining a reputation as a vocal backbench critic of her successor, though she did vote in favour of both the renegotiated Withdrawal Agreement and then the subsequent UK-EU FTA despite critiquing it heavily. Notably when Boris Johnson was forced to resign three years later following a series of scandals and was given a standing ovation at the end of his last [=PMQs=] Theresa May refused to stand and clap.

to:

Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor--and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he actually ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to only stand in non-Conservative seats while focusing on draining votes from traditional Labour orders). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years--though years. However, the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this this, which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK economy is demonstrating to UK's economy, showed some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.

May chose to stand for re-election to her constituency seat in the 2019 general election, and was duly returned. She is the first former PM to seek re-election to the Commons after having been removed from power since UsefulNotes/JamesCallaghan in 1983.[[note]]UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath, who had been ex-PM since 1974 and was in the midst of "the longest sulk in history", was also still serving in Parliament at this time -- and would remain in his Commons seat until 2001, long after 1987, when Callaghan retired and was elevated to the Lords in 1987.Lords.[[/note]] She is During Johnson's premiership she was the only former PM in either House house of Parliament, and she is the only living female former PM (since Thatcher died before she even reached the same position). position,[[note]]May was actually very keen on being the first woman PM in her youth and was disappointed that Thatcher beat her to that distinction.[[/note]] and the third, Johnson's immediate successor UsefulNotes/LizTruss, is the incumbent as of 2022). Like UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath Edward Heath before her, she has been gaining gained a reputation as a vocal backbench critic of her successor, though she did vote in favour of both the renegotiated Withdrawal Agreement and then the subsequent UK-EU FTA UK–EU Free Trade Agreement despite critiquing it heavily. Notably Notably, when Boris Johnson was forced to resign three years later following a series of scandals and was given a standing ovation at the end of his last [=PMQs=] [=PMQs=], Theresa May refused to stand and clap.
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Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the catastrophic summer of '22 collapse of confidence in her successor in 2022 lowered the bar, in that respect--and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he actually ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to only stand in non-Conservative seats while focusing on draining votes from traditional Labour orders). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years--though the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK economy is demonstrating to some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.

to:

Her premiership, much like that of her predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--even if the catastrophic bar in that respect was lowered in the summer of '22 2022, by the unprecedented collapse of governmental confidence in her successor in 2022 lowered the bar, in that respect--and successor--and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he actually ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to only stand in non-Conservative seats while focusing on draining votes from traditional Labour orders). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years--though the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK economy is demonstrating to some people why this was not a good idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.
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Much like [[UsefulNotes/DavidCameron her predecessor]], her premiership is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--or at until the catastrophic collapse of her successor's government in 2022 lowered the bar, in that respect--and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It doesn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he actually ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to only stand in non-Conservative seats while focusing on draining votes from traditional Labour orders). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years (though the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK economy is demonstrating to some people why this was not a good idea).

to:

Much Her premiership, much like [[UsefulNotes/DavidCameron that of her predecessor]], her premiership predecessor UsefulNotes/DavidCameron, is widely regarded as "amongst the worst"--or at until worst"--even if the catastrophic summer of '22 collapse of confidence in her successor's government successor in 2022 lowered the bar, in that respect--and she can't even claim an accomplishment comparable to his revitalisation of a moribund party. Negligible progress was made on any front, least of all Brexit (the very issue that made her PM in the first place), and many long-simmering tensions within the UK came to the forefront. It doesn't didn't help that her successor Johnson successfully renegotiated the withdrawal agreement with the EU after they refused to do so with her at the helm, ''and'' he took advantage of the polling boost this got him to get the other parties to agree to call a general election, but unlike May, he actually ''won'' his outright, with a very strong majority (though he was helped by Farage's Brexit Party, acting on the orders of Donald Trump, agreeing to only stand in non-Conservative seats while focusing on draining votes from traditional Labour orders). His first order of business was to legislate the Withdrawal Act to take Britain out of Europe, accomplishing in six months (almost to the day!) what she failed to do in over three years (though years--though the chaotic and messy implementation of Brexit following this which quickly had a dreadful effect on the UK economy is demonstrating to some people why this was not a good idea).
idea, and the issue of the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.

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