Former UK
Prime Minister David Cameron is to stand down as an MP, triggering a
by-election in his Oxfordshire seat of Witney.
The
49-year-old said his replacement had "got off to a cracking start".
Mr Cameron,
who has represented Witney since 2001, became Conservative leader in 2005 and
PM in 2010.
Speaking in
his constituency, he said it had been a "great honour" to be an MP
for the area, but said it would be difficult for him to remain on the
backbenches without becoming "a big distraction and a big diversion"
from the work of the new government.
He denied
his announcement was related to the government's moves towards allowing new
grammar schools, a policy he rejected as PM.
He said the
timing - which came after a period of reflection over the summer - was
coincidental, adding that there were "many good things" in the
proposed education reforms.
"Obviously
I'm going to have my own views about different issues," he said.
"People
would know that and that's really the point. As a former prime minister it is
very difficult, I think, to sit as a backbencher and not be an enormous
diversion and distraction from what the government is doing."
Source: BBC
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