Britain's prime minister in waiting
Theresa May is a pragmatist who has emerged from the chaos of the Brexit
referendum unscarred, portraying herself as the one who will lead the country
out of the EU.
The country's second female leader after fellow
Conservative and anti-EU firebrand Margaret Thatcher, May was officially - but
unenthusiastically - in favour of Britain staying in the European Union.
She kept a low
profile throughout the campaign, and when the June 23 referendum delivered a
shock "Leave" result, stepped into the political vacuum left by David
Cameron's decision to quit.
She insists
"Brexit means Brexit".
Although May trounced her rivals for the
premiership, she faces an uphill struggle to unite a country and a party deeply
split by the referendum.
She has been
labelled, in an unguarded moment, a "bloody difficult woman" by
senior Conservative Kenneth Clarke.
But the 59-year-old
claims this is the very quality which will stand her in good stead for the
battles ahead.
"The next
person to find that out will be Jean-Claude Juncker," she reportedly told
MPs, referring to Brexit negotiations with the European Commission president.
About
The PM
May is a keen cricket fan and lists her hobbies as
walking and cooking, telling one interviewer that she had more than 100 cook
books at home.
In an interview for
BBC radio, she selected the Abba song "Dancing Queen" as one of her
favourites.
She is well known
for her collection of leopard-print kitten heel shoes - a contrast with her
sober dress sense and demeanour.
But May as a whole
has been fiercely private about her life in a way that is unusual for modern
politicians.
She was born
Theresa Brasier in the southern English seaside town of Eastbourne in 1956.
Her father Hubert
was an Anglican clergyman, one of several points which has drawn comparisons
between her and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Her education - at a series of little known state
and private schools - has been contrasted with the elite Etonian background of
Cameron and many in his "Notting Hill Set" circle.
Like Cameron, she
attended Oxford University but kept a low profile. It was here that she met her
husband Philip, a banker - they were reportedly introduced by Benazir Bhutto,
later assassinated as Pakistani premier.
The couple married
in 1980 but were unable to have children. May's rival Andrea Leadsom withdrew
from the leadership race two days after comments were published suggesting this
made her less qualified to be prime minister.
May worked in
finance, including at the Bank of England, before being elected as MP for the
London commuter town of Maidenhead in 1997.
As Conservative
chairwoman in 2002, she made waves by suggesting the Tories were seen as
"the nasty party" and needed to overhaul their image - although under
Cameron's leadership, they did so.
'Safe pair of hands'
When the
Conservatives won the 2010 general election, May was named home secretary, the
hardest job in government which has wrecked a string of other political
careers.
But May has kept
the job for six years - the longest serving interior minister since 1892.
Supporters say her
achievements include deporting radical cleric Abu Qatada to Jordan - where he
was later freed after a decade of legal cases - and standing up to the Police
Federation, the powerful police officers union, to try and address a string of
scandals.
In 2013, May
revealed she has type 1 diabetes but insisted it would not affect her career,
saying it was a question of "head down and getting on with it".
While widely respected, she is not part of any
clique at Westminster, acknowledging that she does not drink in parliament's
many bars or "gossip about people over lunch".
Instead, a source
who has worked closely with her told AFP on condition of anonymity she was
"incredibly hard-working".
"She's always
got up three hours before everybody else and knows five times more than anyone
else in the room," the source added.
"Theresa is
not going to do anything radical... she's incredibly risk-averse, a safe pair
of hands."
Courtesy: SBS.com
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