UK govt suffers first resignation under May

Lord Jim O'Neill, who worked on boosting Chinese investment in Britain, stepped down as a junior Treasury minister

Britain's Home Secretary Theresa May attends a press conference in London, Britain, June 30, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

LONDON:
British Prime Minister Theresa May's government suffered its first resignation Friday when a former Goldman Sachs chief economist closely associated with the policies of her predecessor David Cameron quit.

Lord Jim O'Neill, who had worked on boosting Chinese investment in Britain and a flagship project to bolster the economy in northwest England, stepped down as a junior Treasury minister.

He had reportedly threatened to quit in July after May announced a review of whether to go ahead with the Hinkley Point nuclear plant, a key Chinese investment in Britain's economy.

Theresa May's inbox: Uniting kingdom and country, uncoupling from EU


The government gave the go-ahead for the controversial development last week with new conditions attached.

In his resignation letter , O'Neill said he joined the government of Cameron -- who left office in July after Britain voted to leave the EU -- "for the specific purpose of helping deliver the Northern Powerhouse, and to help boost our economic ties with key growing economies around the world, especially China and India".

New British PM calls Pakistan a dependable ally

"I am pleased that, despite speculation to the contrary, both appear to be commanding your personal attention," he added.

Cameron himself stepped down as a backbench lawmaker this month amid reports he was unhappy with May's decision to allow the creation of academically selective state-funded schools, a policy he had always opposed.
Load Next Story