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Version 11 | Version 12 |
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Blair tells Cabinet he will quit | Blair tells Cabinet he will quit |
(10 minutes later) | |
Tony Blair is travelling to his Sedgefield constituency where he will make public his plans to stand down as Labour leader and prime minister. | Tony Blair is travelling to his Sedgefield constituency where he will make public his plans to stand down as Labour leader and prime minister. |
Mr Blair has already briefed the Cabinet on when he will quit, with his likely successor Gordon Brown reportedly paying tribute to him. | |
Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Hain said it had been a "cordial, comradely" meeting with "quite a lot of laughter". | |
Mr Blair will stay on for seven weeks until a new Labour leader is chosen. | |
A Cabinet source told the BBC "Gordon Brown made a short and very moving tribute to Tony Blair's leadership, not just of Labour and the United Kingdom but also of the world". | |
Mr Hain, who is a candidate for Labour's deputy leadership, said Mr Brown would now "take up Tony Blair's mantle in the next period of our government". | |
Mr Blair is expected to make a speech on his retirement plans at 1145 BST. | |
Succession | Succession |
His election agent and close friend John Burton said he expected Mr Blair to continue as Sedgefield's MP until the next general election, unless he was offered a major international job. | |
He's going of his own choice. He's doing it at a time which he thinks is good for the country, is good for the government Peter Mandelson Q&A: What happens now? | He's going of his own choice. He's doing it at a time which he thinks is good for the country, is good for the government Peter Mandelson Q&A: What happens now? |
Mr Blair's official spokesman insists he will remain "focused" on being prime minister until Labour has chosen his successor - a process expected to last seven weeks. | |
He said Mr Blair still has lots of work to do on domestic issues and had a number of international commitments in the run-up to this summer's G8 and EU summits. | |
But with a new prime minister expected to be in place by the beginning of July, attention at Westminster has already shifted to his succession. | But with a new prime minister expected to be in place by the beginning of July, attention at Westminster has already shifted to his succession. |
Mr Brown is unlikely to face a Cabinet-level challenge for the leadership as all of the likely contenders have ruled themselves out. | Mr Brown is unlikely to face a Cabinet-level challenge for the leadership as all of the likely contenders have ruled themselves out. |
But he could still face a challenge from one of two left wing backbenchers - John McDonnell and Michael Meacher. The pair are meeting later to see if one of them can muster enough support to get on to the ballot paper. | |
'Paralysis' | |
Candidates need the signatures of 45 Labour MPs to enter a contest. | Candidates need the signatures of 45 Labour MPs to enter a contest. |
Six deputy leadership hopefuls will also be battling for nominations to enter the race to replace John Prescott, who is due to stand down with Mr Blair. | Six deputy leadership hopefuls will also be battling for nominations to enter the race to replace John Prescott, who is due to stand down with Mr Blair. |
Conservative leader David Cameron has said the country faces seven weeks of "paralysis" until Labour chooses a new leader, accusing Mr Blair of running a government of the "living dead". | |
We have grown used to having a leader who is always centre stage BBC political editor Nick Robinson Read Nick's thoughts in full | We have grown used to having a leader who is always centre stage BBC political editor Nick Robinson Read Nick's thoughts in full |
The Liberal Democrats have, meanwhile, tabled a Parliamentary motion urging the Queen to dissolve parliament and call a general election. | The Liberal Democrats have, meanwhile, tabled a Parliamentary motion urging the Queen to dissolve parliament and call a general election. |
But European Union Trade Commissioner and close Blair ally, Peter Mandelson, denied that Mr Blair's last weeks in office would be as a lame duck leader. | |
"'He's going of his own choice. He's doing it at a time which he thinks is good for the country, is good for the government." | "'He's going of his own choice. He's doing it at a time which he thinks is good for the country, is good for the government." |