Prime Minister Theresa May has won the vote of confidence amongst her fellow Conservative MPs and will remain as party leader.
Mrs May won the support of 200 MPs, with 117 voting no confidence, according to the results of the secret ballot announced at 9pm by chairman of the 1922 Committee Sir Graham Brady from committee room 14 of the Houses of Parliament.
The prime minister needed to gain the support of more than half of Tory MPs in the House of Commons — 159 out of 317.
Westminster watchers were quick to point out that by winning 200 votes, Theresa May got one more MP backing her than when she was selected as a candidate to lead the party in 2016.
Now that Mrs May has won her vote of confidence, she is protected from further leadership challenges for the next 12 months.
Had Mrs May lost, she would have remained prime minister until the party found a new leader, a task in the hands of Sir Graham.
The chairman of the backbench 1922 Committee announced this morning that he had received letters calling for a confidence vote from 15 per cent of the House’s Tory MPs, 48, with the prime minister telling the nation that she would “contest that vote with everything I’ve got.”
The prime minister then battled Jeremy Corbyn at Prime Minister’s Questions at noon before meeting with the Brexiteer European Research Group (ERG) to win their support, and spoke to Conservative backbench MPs of the 1922 Committee at 5pm, an hour before the two-hour ballot.
Media reported that during the 1922 Committee meeting, the prime minister told Conservatives she would not lead the party into the next election in 2022.
Despite winning tonight’s vote, the prime minister still lacks a majority to pass her withdrawal agreement between the UK and the European Union.
The prime minister’s spokesman said Mrs May will take the opportunity during her trip to Brussels on Thursday to discuss with other EU leaders the situation in the UK, believing she will gain assurances over the Irish backstop — the issue holding up a successful passing of the agreement in Parliament.
A senior official in the bloc has said Prime Minister May will gain those assurances, according to Reuters, and will see what more she needs for MPs to back the agreement.
“I cannot tell you what sort of re-assurance leaders will give to Prime Minister May. What is not feasible is the re-negotiation of the withdrawal agreement, everything else is possible. Whatever assurances can be given, cannot contradict the deal,” the official said.
Mrs May is expected to make a statement this evening.
This story is developing…
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