Thoughts of his legacy prompted David Cameron’s quit admission

"He is saying he has no intention of leaving after the referendum"

Andrew Grice
Tuesday 24 March 2015 15:34 EDT
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The Prime Minister speaks to members of 'Age UK' after an election rally at the Queen Elizabeth II centre on Tuesday
The Prime Minister speaks to members of 'Age UK' after an election rally at the Queen Elizabeth II centre on Tuesday (Getty Images)

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What on earth was David Cameron doing when he sparked a frenzy of speculation about his departure date and the Tory succession? The question was on many lips at Westminster today.

“He was shooting from the hip – it was a cock-up,” said one Conservative Cabinet minister, departing from the official line that Cameron was merely giving a straight answer to a straight question in a BBC interview.

Some Tory MPs saw his unguarded remarks as part of a “Save Dave” campaign – to remind critics tempted to oust him after a poor election result in May that he would not hang around for ever. But such a message would cut little ice with his enemy within.

The most plausible explanation is that the BBC’s question triggered his desire to dispel the growing impression at Westminster that he might stand down soon after the in/out EU referendum he has promised in 2017.

If his recommendation were rejected by the public, he would probably have to quit. What he was really saying on Monday was that he has no intention of leaving after winning the referendum. But he had not thought through the consequences of saying it.

Cameron made clear yesterday that he has other projects in mind, and does not want to go down solely as the leader who resolved Britain’s relationship with Europe and cleared the deficit. “I don’t want my political epitaph to be that I balanced the books and cleared up the mess I inherited,” he said. “I want a different kind of Britain – a country with the right values.”

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