Difference between revisions of "Theresa May"

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{{person
 
{{person
 +
|image=Maybot.jpg
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|image_width=240px
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|name=Baroness May
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|description=[[UK deep state]] functionary who was [[UK PM]] 2016-2019
 +
|geni=https://www.geni.com/people/Rt-Hon-Theresa-May-MP-PC-Prime-Minister/6000000017650054573
 +
|image_caption=Facing defeat in the [[House of Commons]]
 
|website=http://www.tmay.co.uk/
 
|website=http://www.tmay.co.uk/
|wikipedia=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theresa_May
+
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theresa_May
|constitutes=politician
+
|constitutes=politician, deep state functionary
 
|spouses=Philip May
 
|spouses=Philip May
|alma_mater=St Hugh's College, Oxford
+
|alma_mater=St Hugh's College (Oxford)
|birth_date=1956-10-01
+
|birth_date=1 January 1956
 
|birth_name=Theresa Mary Brasier
 
|birth_name=Theresa Mary Brasier
 
|birth_place=Eastbourne, England
 
|birth_place=Eastbourne, England
 
|religion=Anglicanism
 
|religion=Anglicanism
|political_parties=Conservative
+
|political_parties=Conservative Party
 +
|powerbase=http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/Theresa_May
 +
|sourcewatch=http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Theresa_May
 
|employment={{job
 
|employment={{job
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|title=Member of the House of Lords
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|start=12 September 2024
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|end=
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}}{{job
 +
|title=UK/Prime Minister
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|start=13 July 2016
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|end=24 July 2019
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}}{{job
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|title=Chairperson-in-office of the Commonwealth of Nations
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|start=19 April 2018
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|end=24 July 2019
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}}{{job
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|title=Leader of the Conservative Party
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|start=11 July 2016
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|end=7 June 2019
 +
}}{{job
 
|title=Home Secretary
 
|title=Home Secretary
 
|start=12 May 2010
 
|start=12 May 2010
|end=
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|end=13 July 2016
 
}}{{job
 
}}{{job
 
|title=Minister for Women and Equalities
 
|title=Minister for Women and Equalities
Line 65: Line 89:
 
|title=Member of Parliament for Maidenhead
 
|title=Member of Parliament for Maidenhead
 
|start=1 May 1997
 
|start=1 May 1997
|end=
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|end=30 Mayy 2024
 +
}}
 
}}
 
}}
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'''Theresa Mary May''', '''Baroness May of Maidenhead''', is the former [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]], who succeeded [[David Cameron]] on 13 July 2016 and became the UK's second female PM, after [[Margaret Thatcher]].<ref>''[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-36768148 "PM-in-waiting Theresa May promises 'a better Britain'"]''</ref>
 +
 +
Speaking outside 10 Downing Street after being appointed by [[the Queen]], Theresa May said it would be her mission to "build a better Britain". She promised to give the JAMs (people who were "just about managing") more control over their lives and later began appointing Cabinet members, with [[Philip Hammond]] becoming [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]] and [[Boris Johnson]] becoming the new [[Foreign Secretary]].<ref>''[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-36788782 "Theresa May vows to be 'one nation' prime minister"]''</ref>
 +
 +
She stood down as Prime Minister on 24 July 2019, following the election by [[Conservative Party]] members of her former [[Foreign Secretary]], [[Boris Johnson]], to replace her; but remained in the [[House of Commons]] as a backbencher until the [[UK/General election/2024]].<ref>''[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/uk-politics-49073992 "UK waits for prime minister announcement"]''</ref>
 +
 +
==Background==
 +
Theresa May's father, [[Hubert Brasier]] was killed in a car crash in 1981.
 +
 +
==Career==
 +
Throughout her political career, Theresa May has shown herself a tool of the [[UK deep state]], unquestioning in her support for the {{on}} about the need to combat "[[terrorism]]".
 +
 +
===Home Secretary===
 +
As Britain's longest serving Home Secretary, Theresa May was aggressive in her support for the [[deep state]]'s [[universal surveillance]]. After [[Edward Snowden]]'s revelations of illegal surveillance by the UK intelligence agencies (especially [[GCHQ]]), May did not respond by announcing that the perpetrators would be arrested. Instead, in November 2015, she announced new surveillance legislation that explicitly legalised such surveillance while mandated that ISPs keep logs, for example, the addresses of all web pages visited by their customers in the last 12 months.<ref>''[http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/nov/04/investigatory-powers-bill-the-key-points "Investigatory powers bill: the key points"]''</ref>
 +
 +
===UK Prime Minister===
 +
As [[UK Prime Minister]], in 2017, following high profile acts of "terror", May remarked that {{SMWQ
 +
|format=inline
 +
|subjects=extremism, tolerance
 +
|authors=Theresa May
 +
|date=2017
 +
|text=There is to be frank, far too much tolerance of [[extremism]] in our country.
 +
|source_URL=http://www.globalresearch.ca/london-terror-to-complete-brexit-coup-detat/5593600
 
}}
 
}}
[[Theresa May]] is the current [[Home Secretary]]. She has been aggressive in her support for the [[deep state]]'s [[mass surveillance]].
 
  
==Legalisation of Mass surveillance==
+
====UK/2017 General Election====
After [[Edward Snowden's revelations]] of illegal [[mass surveillance]] by the UK intelligence agencies (especially [[GCHQ]]), Theresa May did not respond by announcing that the perpetrators would be arrested. Instead, in November 2015, she announced new surveillance legislation that explicitly legalised such surveillance while mandated that ISPs assist such surveillance by requiring them to keep logs, for example, the addresses of all web pages visited by their customers in the last 12 months.<ref>http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/nov/04/investigatory-powers-bill-the-key-points</ref>
+
{{FA|UK/2017 General Election}}
 +
Expecting to achieve a landslide majority{{cn}} and strengthen her hand in the [[Brexit]] negotiations, on 19 April 2017 Theresa May called a snap [[UK/2017 General Election|General Election]] for 8 June 2017. Contrary to her expectations, however, the Conservatives lost their parliamentary majority in the election, and have to rely on the support of the [[DUP]]'s ten MPs to continue in government. On 12 June 2017, Theresa May told backbenchers in the 1922 Committee:
 +
:"I got us into this mess, and I'm the one who'll get us out of it."
 +
She also signalled that she may be open to re-calibrating her approach to [[Brexit]], telling MPs that she would listen to "all voices" in the party on the issue.<ref>''[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/theresa-may-tory-election-latest-pm-says-to-mps-she-will-get-out-mess-a7786586.html "Theresa May admits 'I got us into this mess' in meeting with Tory MPs"]''</ref>
 +
 
 +
====Lying to Parliament====
 +
On 28 June 2017, [[SKWAWKBOX]] cited three videos and claimed that Theresa May had [[lied to Parliament]] at PMQs when challenged by [[Jeremy Corbyn]] over the Tories’ cuts to local authority funding and the dangers they have created, particularly in relation to the [[Grenfell Tower fire]].<ref>''[https://videopress.com/v/zjyxONXG "Tory cuts led to Grenfell Tower fire"]''</ref>
  
==Education==
+
"Typically, Theresa May dodged any semblance of an answer to the question of funding. Instead, she tried to answer a question that hadn’t been asked, about who was in government when cladding began to be used on tower blocks. And, again typically, she screwed even that up – and lied outright to the House.<ref>''[https://youtu.be/Il0rVH2thWA "May claimed that the cladding of tower blocks began under Tony Blair’s New Labour government"]''</ref>
On becoming home secretary it was widely reported in the media that May had been educated at a comprehensive school.<ref>BBC News, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/election_2010/8678271.stm Cameron coalition: Theresa May made home secretary], BBC News, 13-May-2010, Accessed 13-May-2010</ref><ref>PA, [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/theresa-may-flies-the-flag-for-women-in-government-1971727.html Theresa May flies the flag for women in Government], ''The Independent'', 12-May-2010</ref> In 2007 [[Peter Hitchens]] disputed this claim:
 
  
:Now, here's the interesting thing. Mrs May joined Holton Grammar at the age of 13 (later than the usual 11) from a private school, in 1969. She then had about two years of grammar school education. And she completed her schooling at a new comprehensive, successfully enough to win a place at St Hugh's, then a women-only college at Oxford. But in 'Dod's Parliamentary Companion', the more detailed 'Who's Who' for MPs, she sums up her secondary schooling as 'Educated at Wheatley Park Comprehensive School'. As you see, it's a lot more complicated than that. And I don't think she needed to use the word 'comprehensive' when describing her school.<ref>Peter Hitchens, [http://hitchensblog.mailonsunday.co.uk/2007/05/index.html Lessons in Grammar], Daily Mail, 22-May-2007, Accessed 13-May-2010</ref>  
+
"May claimed that the cladding of tower blocks began under [[Tony Blair]]’s New Labour government. She misled the House by about twenty years as this 1984 video shows, it in fact began under [[Margaret Thatcher]] during another period of Tory cuts to local government funding.<ref>''[https://youtu.be/upViHb8z4wY "The 1984 documentary that predicted Grenfell Tower fire"]''</ref>
  
==Affiliations==
+
"Before the Tories began the degradation of Parliament by allowing various ministers to remain in position even after lies and other offences, lying to the [[House of Commons]] used to be an automatic resignation offence.
 +
 
 +
"Theresa May has no honour. If she did, she wouldn’t have risked peace in Northern Ireland by getting into bed with the hard-right, paramilitary-linked DUP to bail her out after her abject [[UK/2017 General Election|general election]] failure. So she won’t resign as she should.
 +
 
 +
"But if there are any MPs among her back-benchers – or even (though unlikely) her front-bench team – that still have a sense of honour, they ought to be giving serious thought to voting with the [[Labour Party]] on its public service pay amendment this evening.
 +
 
 +
"If May won’t do the decent thing herself, others in her party need to do it for her – and bring down a dishonest government led by a lying PM."<ref>''[https://skwawkbox.org/2017/06/28/video-theresa-may-lies-outright-to-parliament-over-grenfell-cladding/ "VIDEO: THERESA MAY LIES OUTRIGHT TO PARLIAMENT OVER #GRENFELL #CLADDING"]''</ref>
 +
 
 +
==="Brexit means Brexit"===
 +
{{FA|Brexit}}
 +
During her brief and successful 2016 [[Conservative Party]] leadership campaign,<ref>''[http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jul/05/ken-clarke-caught-camera-ridiculing-tory-leadership-candidates-theresa-may-michael-gove "Ken Clarke caught on camera ridiculing Conservative leadership candidates"]''</ref> May infamously declared {{SMWQ
 +
|subjects=Brexit
 +
|text=Brexit means Brexit, and we're going to make a success of it.
 +
|source_name=The Independent
 +
|date=July 2016
 +
|source_URL=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/theresa-may-brexit-means-brexit-conservative-leadership-no-attempt-remain-inside-eu-leave-europe-a7130596.html
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
==Connections==
 
*[[CChange]] - Former Board member
 
*[[CChange]] - Former Board member
 
==Resources==
 
*Nigel Morris, [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/theresa-may-is-surprise-choice-to-be-home-secretary-1972260.html Theresa May is surprise choice to be Home Secretary] ''[[The Independent]]'', 13-May-2010, Accessed 13-May-2010
 
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Latest revision as of 10:31, 13 September 2024

Person.png Baroness May   Geni Powerbase Sourcewatch WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(politician, deep state functionary)
Maybot.jpg
Facing defeat in the House of Commons
BornTheresa Mary Brasier
1 January 1956
Eastbourne, England
Alma materSt Hugh's College (Oxford)
ReligionAnglicanism
SpousePhilip May
Interest ofJohnny Vedmore
PartyConservative Party
UK deep state functionary who was UK PM 2016-2019

Employment.png Member of the House of Lords Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
12 September 2024 - Present

Employment.png UK/Prime Minister Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
13 July 2016 - 24 July 2019
Preceded byDavid Cameron
Succeeded byBoris Johnson

Employment.png Leader of the Conservative Party Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
11 July 2016 - 7 June 2019
DeputyDamian Green
Preceded byDavid Cameron

Employment.png Home Secretary Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
12 May 2010 - 13 July 2016
Preceded byAlan Johnson
Succeeded byAmber Rudd

Employment.png Minister for Women and Equalities Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
11 May 2010 - 4 September 2012

Employment.png Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions

In office
19 January 2009 - 11 May 2010
Preceded byChris Grayling
Succeeded byYvette Cooper

Employment.png Shadow Minister for Women and Equality

In office
2 July 2007 - 11 May 2010
Succeeded byYvette Cooper

Employment.png Shadow Minister for Women and Equality

In office
15 June 1999 - 18 September 2001

Employment.png Shadow Leader of the House of Commons Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
6 December 2005 - 19 January 2009
Preceded byChris Grayling
Succeeded byAlan Duncan

Employment.png Shadow Secretary of State for the Family Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
15 June 2004 - 8 December 2005

Employment.png Chairman of the Conservative Party Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
23 July 2002 - 6 November 2003
Preceded byDavid Davis
Succeeded byLiam Fox

Employment.png Shadow Secretary of State for Transport Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
6 June 2002 - 23 July 2002

Employment.png Shadow Secretary of State for Education and Employment

In office
15 June 1999 - 18 September 2001
Preceded byDavid Willetts
Succeeded byDamian Green

Employment.png Member of Parliament for Maidenhead

In office
1 May 1997 - 30 Mayy 2024

Theresa Mary May, Baroness May of Maidenhead, is the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, who succeeded David Cameron on 13 July 2016 and became the UK's second female PM, after Margaret Thatcher.[1]

Speaking outside 10 Downing Street after being appointed by the Queen, Theresa May said it would be her mission to "build a better Britain". She promised to give the JAMs (people who were "just about managing") more control over their lives and later began appointing Cabinet members, with Philip Hammond becoming Chancellor of the Exchequer and Boris Johnson becoming the new Foreign Secretary.[2]

She stood down as Prime Minister on 24 July 2019, following the election by Conservative Party members of her former Foreign Secretary, Boris Johnson, to replace her; but remained in the House of Commons as a backbencher until the UK/General election/2024.[3]

Background

Theresa May's father, Hubert Brasier was killed in a car crash in 1981.

Career

Throughout her political career, Theresa May has shown herself a tool of the UK deep state, unquestioning in her support for the official narrative about the need to combat "terrorism".

Home Secretary

As Britain's longest serving Home Secretary, Theresa May was aggressive in her support for the deep state's universal surveillance. After Edward Snowden's revelations of illegal surveillance by the UK intelligence agencies (especially GCHQ), May did not respond by announcing that the perpetrators would be arrested. Instead, in November 2015, she announced new surveillance legislation that explicitly legalised such surveillance while mandated that ISPs keep logs, for example, the addresses of all web pages visited by their customers in the last 12 months.[4]

UK Prime Minister

As UK Prime Minister, in 2017, following high profile acts of "terror", May remarked that “There is to be frank, far too much tolerance of extremism in our country.” [5]

UK/2017 General Election

Full article: UK/2017 General Election

Expecting to achieve a landslide majority[citation needed] and strengthen her hand in the Brexit negotiations, on 19 April 2017 Theresa May called a snap General Election for 8 June 2017. Contrary to her expectations, however, the Conservatives lost their parliamentary majority in the election, and have to rely on the support of the DUP's ten MPs to continue in government. On 12 June 2017, Theresa May told backbenchers in the 1922 Committee:

"I got us into this mess, and I'm the one who'll get us out of it."

She also signalled that she may be open to re-calibrating her approach to Brexit, telling MPs that she would listen to "all voices" in the party on the issue.[6]

Lying to Parliament

On 28 June 2017, SKWAWKBOX cited three videos and claimed that Theresa May had lied to Parliament at PMQs when challenged by Jeremy Corbyn over the Tories’ cuts to local authority funding and the dangers they have created, particularly in relation to the Grenfell Tower fire.[7]

"Typically, Theresa May dodged any semblance of an answer to the question of funding. Instead, she tried to answer a question that hadn’t been asked, about who was in government when cladding began to be used on tower blocks. And, again typically, she screwed even that up – and lied outright to the House.[8]

"May claimed that the cladding of tower blocks began under Tony Blair’s New Labour government. She misled the House by about twenty years – as this 1984 video shows, it in fact began under Margaret Thatcher during another period of Tory cuts to local government funding.[9]

"Before the Tories began the degradation of Parliament by allowing various ministers to remain in position even after lies and other offences, lying to the House of Commons used to be an automatic resignation offence.

"Theresa May has no honour. If she did, she wouldn’t have risked peace in Northern Ireland by getting into bed with the hard-right, paramilitary-linked DUP to bail her out after her abject general election failure. So she won’t resign as she should.

"But if there are any MPs among her back-benchers – or even (though unlikely) her front-bench team – that still have a sense of honour, they ought to be giving serious thought to voting with the Labour Party on its public service pay amendment this evening.

"If May won’t do the decent thing herself, others in her party need to do it for her – and bring down a dishonest government led by a lying PM."[10]

"Brexit means Brexit"

Full article: Brexit

During her brief and successful 2016 Conservative Party leadership campaign,[11] May infamously declared

“Brexit means Brexit, and we're going to make a success of it.”
Theresa May (July 2016)  [12]

Connections

 

A Quote by Theresa May

PageQuoteDate
"Non-violent extremism"“non-violent extremism goes unchallenged, the values that bind our society together fragment.”2015

 

Appointments by Theresa May

AppointeeJobAppointedEndDescription
Stephen BarclaySecretary of State for Exiting the European Union16 November 201831 January 2020
Stephen BarclayMinister/State for Health9 January 201816 November 2018
Stephen BarclayEconomic Secretary to the Treasury14 June 20179 January 2018
Stephen BarclayCity Minister14 June 20179 January 2018
Stephen BarclayLord Commissioner of the Treasury17 July 201614 June 2017
Michael FallonUK/Defence Secretary15 July 20141 November 2017
Adrian FulfordInvestigatory Powers Commissioner3 March 2017
Michael GoveUK/Minister/Environment11 June 201724 July 2019
Matt HancockUK/Culture Secretary8 January 20189 July 2018
Matt HancockUK/Minister of State for Digital and Culture15 July 20158 January 2018
Damian HindsUK/Minister/Employment17 July 20168 January 2018
Damian HindsUK/Secretary of State for Education8 January 201824 July 2019
Nick HurdMinister of State for Climate Change and Industry16 July 201612 June 2017
Nick HurdMinister of State for Policing and the Fire Services12 June 201725 July 2019
Nick HurdMinister of State for London14 November 201816 December 2019
Boris JohnsonUK/Foreign Secretary13 July 20169 July 2018
David JonesMinister of State for Exiting the European Union17 July 201612 June 2017
Kwasi KwartengParliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union16 November 201824 July 2019
Lizzie LoudonDowning Street Press Secretary20162017
Esther McVeySecretary of State for Work and Pensions8 January 201815 November 2018Resigned over Brexit
Penny MordauntUK/Minister/Development9 November 20171 May 2019
Penny MordauntUK/Defence Secretary1 May 201924 July 2019
Penny MordauntMinister for Women and Equalities30 April 201824 July 2019
Neil O'BrienSpecial AdviserNovember 20122017
Priti PatelUK/Secretary of State for International Development14 July 20168 November 2017
Mark SedwillCabinet Secretary24 October 20189 September 2020
Mark SedwillUK/National Security AdviserApril 2017September 2020
Liz TrussSecretary of State for Justice14 July 201611 June 2017
Liz TrussChief Secretary to the Treasury11 June 201724 July 2019
Liz TrussLord Chancellor14 July 201611 June 2017
Gavin WilliamsonHouse of Commons/Chief Whip14 July 20162 November 2017
Gavin WilliamsonUK/Defence Secretary2 November 20171 May 2019
Jeremy WrightUK/Culture Secretary9 July 201824 July 2019
Nadhim ZahawiParliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Children and Families9 January 201825 July 2019

 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteDate
Document:Mrs. May & MI5 In Disarray“Under the stiff carapace is a hollowness, a lack of empathy, language or political imagination.”5 June 2017

 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Munich Security Conference/201812 February 201814 February 2018Germany
Munich
Bavaria
The 54th Munich Security Conference
WEF/Annual Meeting/201717 January 201720 January 2017World Economic Forum
Switzerland
2950 known participants, including prominently Bill Gates. "Offers a platform for the most effective and engaged leaders to achieve common goals for greater societal leadership."
WEF/Annual Meeting/201823 January 201826 January 2018Switzerland~2200 of the super-rich meet to talk about "Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World"

 

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Document:‘No slither of evidence’ against Russia over Skripal attack, George Galloway tells RTVideo28 March 2018George GallowayGeorge Galloway concludes: "The OPCW, which is currently examining samples of the nerve agent used against the Skripals, will presumably be lent upon to obfuscate the outcome. No one will ever know the truth.”
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