In fact, she will visit three more countries for the trade relations. Theresa is in Kenya. Later on, she went to the UN office in Nairobi. While looking the scouts dancing May also decided to dance. The dance moves by the British PM is frank but awkward. Apart from that, it is a sweet gesture from her. Soon, she got a name Maybot. It is not her first dance in Africa. She was born in Eastbourne, England. Her mother name is Zaidee Mary and father named, Hubert Brasier.
Her father was a Church of England clergyman. She has siblings as well. As of educational qualifications, she attended Wheatley Park Comprehensive School. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
May emphasised the need for unity within the party regardless of positions on leaving the EU, saying she could bring "strong leadership" and a "positive vision" for the country's future. Despite having backed a vote to remain in the EU, she insisted that there would be no second referendum, saying: "The campaign was fought There must be no attempts to remain inside the EU, no attempts to rejoin it through the back door Brexit means Brexit". Addressing the world's media outside 10 Downing Street, May said that she was "honoured and humbled" to become prime minister.
On becoming prime minister, May became the first woman to have held two of the Great Offices of State. The First May ministry delayed the final approval for the Hinkley Point C nuclear power station in July , a project which May had objected to when she was Home Secretary.
Her political adviser Nick Timothy wrote an article in to oppose China's involvement in sensitive sectors. He said that the government was "selling our national security to China" without rational concerns and "the Government seems intent on ignoring the evidence and presumably the advice of the security and intelligence agencies".
In July , when George Kerevan asked her whether she would be prepared to authorise the killing of a hundred thousand innocent persons by a nuclear strike; during the "Trident debate" inside the House of Commons, May said "Yes. And I have to say to the honourable gentleman: the whole point of a deterrent is that our enemies need to know that we would be prepared to use it. Unlike some suggestions that we could have a nuclear deterrent but not actually be willing to use it, which come from the Labour Party frontbench.
May had a high approval rating during her first week as prime minister. A ComRes poll taken in September after her election suggested May was seen as substantially more "in touch with ordinary British people" than her predecessor David Cameron and a majority of voters saw her as "the right person to unite the country".
The May Ministry delayed the final approval for the Hinkley Point C nuclear power station in July , a project which May had objected to when she was Home Secretary. Her political adviser Nick Timothy wrote an article in to oppose People's Republic of China's involvement in sensitive sectors. He said that the government was "selling our national security to China" without rational concerns and "the Government seems intent on ignoring the evidence and presumably the advice of the security and intelligence agencies.
Before her premiership began, May said that she planned to have workers represented on company boards, saying "If I'm prime minister Nils Pratley, a journalist at The Guardian, wrote in July "Fundamental principles of Britain's boardroom governance are being rethought. It is a very welcome development. In the more enlightened quarters of the UK corporate world, they can see that boardroom pay has eroded trust in business. May was accused of backtracking in November when she said that firms would not be forced to adopt the proposal, saying "there are a number of ways in which that can be achieved".
May publicly stated her support for the UK remaining in the EU during the referendum campaign, but did not campaign extensively in the referendum and criticised aspects of the EU in a speech. It was speculated by political journalists that May had sought to minimise her involvement in the debate to strengthen her position as a future candidate for the Conservative party leadership. Some in David Cameron's ministry likened May to a "submarine" on the issue of Brexit due to her perceived indifference towards the referendum and the EU.
May has not given MPs a vote over the European Union. Nicky Morgan stated "in MPs aren't asking for a veto but they do want a say and we hope the Prime Minister will remember her earlier words". Anna Soubry and Nick Clegg also called for more parliamentary involvement. She says she will not seek to prevent England and Wales leaving but wants to preserve Scotland's place in the EU.
In the end the Supreme Court required a vote in the UK parliament. May also championed legislation popularly dubbed the Snooper's Charter, requiring internet and mobile service providers to keep records of internet usage, voice calls, messages and email for up to a year in case police requested access to the records while investigating a crime.
The Liberal Democrats had blocked the first attempt, but after the Conservative Party obtained a majority in the general election May announced a new Draft Investigatory Powers Bill similar to the Draft Communications Data Bill, although with more limited powers and additional oversight. Liberal Democrat minister Norman Baker accused May of suppressing proposals to treat rather than prosecute minor drug offenders from a report into drug policy commissioned by the Home Office.
The Home Office denied that its officials had considered this as part of their strategy. Baker cited difficulties in working with May as the reason for his resignation from the Home Office in the run-up to the general election.
During her leadership campaign, May said that "We need an economy that works for everyone", pledging to crack down on executive pay by making shareholders' votes binding rather than advisory and to put workers onto company boards although she later claimed that the last pledge was not to be mandatory , policies that The Guardian describes as going further than the Labour Party's general election manifesto.
Before the Manchester Arena bombing and after the Paris attacks, she was warned by a Manchester senior police officer that the cuts on the force and community policing risked terror attacks in the city due the lack of resources to do proper intelligence and anti-terrorist measures.
In , despite inquiries by both Scotland Yard and the Independent Police Complaints Commission ruling that there was no new evidence to warrant further investigation, after discussions with Dame Doreen Lawrence, May commissioned Mark Ellison to review Scotland Yard's investigations into alleged police corruption.
The report was presented to Parliament by May on 6 March Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police said the report, which has prompted an inquiry into undercover policing, was "devastating". In , May delivered a speech to the Police Federation, in which she criticised aspects of the culture of the police force.
In the speech, she said:. In mid , the Passport Office faced a backlog in developing processing passport applications, with around 30, applications hit by delays. David Cameron suggested this had come about due to the Passport Office's receiving an "above normal" ,rise in applications.
It was revealed, however, that May had been warned the year before, in July , that a surge of , extra applications could occur owing to the closure of processing overseas under Chancellor Osborne's programme of cuts. In June , an inflamed public argument arose between Home Office and Education Ministers about responsibility for alleged extremism in Birmingham schools. On 20 July, May attended her first Prime Minister's Questions since taking office, then afterwards made her first overseas trip as prime minister, visiting Berlin for talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
During the visit, May said that she would not trigger Article 50 of the Treaty of Lisbon—the process for withdrawing from the European Union—before , suggesting it would take time for the UK to negotiate a "sensible and orderly departure" from the EU. However, although Merkel said it was right for the UK to "take a moment" before beginning the process, she urged May to provide more clarity on a timetable for negotiations.
Shortly before travelling to Berlin, May had also announced that in the wake of the referendum, Britain would relinquish the presidency of the Council of the European Union, which passes between member states every six months on a rotation basis, and that the UK had been scheduled to hold in the second half of In August , May supported the detention of David Miranda, partner of Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald, under the Terrorism Act , saying that critics of the Metropolitan Police action needed to "think about what they are condoning".
Lib Dem peer and former Director of Public Prosecutions Ken Macdonald accused May of an "ugly and unhelpful" attempt to implicate those who were concerned about the police action of "condoning terrorism". The High Court subsequently acknowledged there were "indirect implications for press freedom" but ruled the detention legal.
She said that this was partly due to the government removing red tape and scrapping targets to allow the police to concentrate on crime-fighting. The council reached the conclusion that there was "insufficient evidence" it caused health problems. Explaining the change in the classification May said: "The decision to bring khat under control is finely balanced and takes into account the expert scientific advice and these broader concerns", and pointed out that the product had already been banned in the majority of other EU member states, as well as most of the G8 countries including Canada and the US.
A report on khat use by the ACMD published in January had noted the product had been associated with "acute psychotic episodes", "chronic liver disease" and family breakdown. However, it concluded that there is no risk of harm for most users, and recommended that khat remain uncontrolled due to lack of evidence for these associations.
May responded to a Supreme Court decision in November to overturn her predecessor Jacqui Smith's revocation of Iraqi-born terror suspect Al Jedda's British citizenship by ordering it to be revoked for a second time, making him the first person to be stripped twice of British citizenship. The deportation was the result of a treaty negotiated by May in April , under which Jordan agreed to give Qatada a fair trial, by not using evidence that may have been obtained against him through torture.
May pointed to Qatada's deportation as a triumph, guaranteeing in September that "he will not be returning to the UK", and declaring in her leadership campaign announcement that she was told that she "couldn't deport Abu Qatada" but that she "flew to Jordan and negotiated the treaty that got him out of Britain for good". The Qatada deportation also shaped May's views on the European Convention on Human Rights and European Court of Human Rights, saying that they had "moved the goalposts" and had a "crazy interpretation of our human rights laws", as a result, May has since campaigned against the institutions, saying that British withdrawal from them should be considered.
In August , the Home Office engaged in an advertising campaign directed at illegal immigrants. The advertisements, in the form of mobile advertising hoardings on the back of lorries, told illegal immigrants to "go home or face arrest", with an image of a person in handcuffs, and were deployed in six London boroughs with substantial ethnic minority populations. They were widely criticised as creating a hostile atmosphere for members of ethnic minority groups.
The shadow Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper, described their language as being reminiscent of that used by the National Front in the s. An adjudication by the Advertising Standards Authority ASA said that "the claim [that arrests were made last week] was misleading and had not been substantiated" was followed by the advertisements being withdrawn after being banned by the ASA. On 14 February the same year, May suffered another Commons defeat after MPs voted by to — a majority of 45 — against a motion endorsing the government's Brexit negotiating strategy.
In democracies, politicians are typically voted by people. Politicians propose, support, and create new laws or policies that govern the land and people.
A politician can be anyone who seeks to achieve political power in an institution. Politicians are active, especially within their political party. Different positions of politicians include local, executive, legislative and judicial offices of both regional and national governments. What is reality TV? Reality TV or reality television is a genre of television programming that may present unscripted dramatic or humorous situations, documents actual events, and features ordinary people rather than professional actors.
Reality TV can be described as a form of an artificial or heightened documentary. The TV genre has always existed, but increased in popularity around the year What is reality? Reality can be defined as all that is real or existent within a system in opposition to what is only imaginary. Reality can be defined as the totality of a system, and is either known or unknown. Human perception through each of the human senses affects how reality and the world appears to the individual.
What is augmented reality? Augmented reality or AR, is the interactive experience of a realistic environment in which the objects of the real world are enhanced by a computer in all senses including visual, auditory, touch, and smell. Augmented reality adds to what is existing rather than replacing it like virtual reality. Augmented reality has been around since the s, but is often presented as futuristic technology.
How many women are in the world? Typically out of 1, people there are For every girls there are about boys born. The total world population is about 7. When is a girl considered a woman? There is not universal age when a girl is considered a woman as it depends on the individual. A girl may be considered a woman by her maturity level or after becoming completely independent. Some cultures consider that a girl becomes a woman after her first menstrual cycle.
When did women get the right to vote in the US? Women got the right to vote in the US after the 19th amendment gave the women the right to vote. The 19th amendment was passed by Congress on June 4, and it was ratified on August 18, Achieving this milestone took decades of protests by women suffrage supporters who lobbied, marched, lectured, wrote, and committed civil disobedience to achieve this goal.
Drawings include: Theresa May front, front waving , side waving , side walking. Links Gov.
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