'My pride and disappointment' as prime minister- Theresa May
Theresa May
has told the BBC she will feel a "mixture of pride and
disappointment" when she leaves Downing Street in 12 days' time.
In her final
TV interview with political editor Laura Kuenssberg, the PM spoke of
"frustration" at not seeing Brexit through and underestimating how
"entrenched" MPs had become.
She said she
had achieved an "enormous amount" in three years in the job.
But she was
sorry having to leave when "there was more that I wanted to do".
Mrs May and
her husband Philip will depart Downing Street on 24 July, succeeded as prime
minister by either Boris Johnson or Jeremy Hunt.
She was
forced to announce her exit in May, amid a revolt by Conservative MPs angry
about her failure to take the UK out of the EU on 29 March and her decision to
open Brexit talks with Labour.
Interviewed
in 10 Downing Street, Mrs May said she "didn't recognise" herself in
criticisms that have been made of her personality and leadership.
But, despite
having to go earlier than she wanted, she insisted she had been the "right
person" for the job and was "immensely proud" of what she had
accomplished.
Asked if she
could have done more to persuade MPs to back her Brexit deal with the EU -
which they rejected three times - she replied: "One could always look back
and say, 'If I'd sat down and talked to people more often'."
Mrs May said
she had wrongly assumed MPs would be "eager to get Brexit over the
line".
"I
actually think there's quite a difference between Parliament and the
public," she said. "I think the public have got a very simple view. A
decision was taken - just get on with it - and they are not in that same
polarised way that Parliament has been about this issue."
It had been,
she said, "incredibly frustrating" that MPs on either side of the
Leave-Remain divide had "got so sort of entrenched that they just were not
willing to make that compromise that would enable us to get the majority to get
this through".
Mrs May
would not be drawn on whether she was planning to back Mr Hunt or Mr Johnson as
her replacement, saying only that "they understand the responsibility that
this job brings".
While
wishing her successor well, she said she would continue to argue that leaving
the EU "with a good deal" was vital.
And she
called for a more discipline in government after years of leaks and political
disagreements inside her cabinet: "Good government depends on collective
responsibility. It needs to return."
During the
interview, Mrs May opened up about life in Downing Street and the emotional
strains of the job, recalling the "chilling" moment she was told
about the Manchester Arena bombing in 2017.
She said she
did not regret calling a snap general election during the same year, in which
she ended up losing her Commons majority.
But Mrs May
conceded she had made mistakes during the campaign, including not appearing in
a TV debate with other party leaders, with the then Home Secretary, Amber Rudd,
taking part instead.
"I
regret running a campaign that wasn't really me," she said. "There
are other things - I think I probably actually should have done the TV
debates."
Mrs May, who
will remain in Parliament as MP for Maidenhead after leaving Downing Street,
defended her economic record, saying unemployment was at a record low and
austerity was coming to an end.
She also
hailed the progress made in tackling some of the "burning injustices"
she highlighted in her first speech after becoming prime minister.
Mrs May said
she was proud of "championing some causes that otherwise will be
unfashionable", such as the fight against modern slavery and domestic
violence and mental health support.
"Brexit
has taken up a lot of people's thinking, but actually there's an enormous
amount that has been done behind that."
She said she
hoped her critics and supporters alike would feel that "in everything I've
done, I've always done what I believed to be in the national interest".
The winner
of the Conservative Party leadership race - and next prime minister - will be
announced on 23 July.
Either Mr
Hunt or Mr Johnson will take over from Mrs May the next day.
FROM bbc.com/news/uk-politics
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