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General News of Monday, 3 June 2019

Source: yen.com.gh

Meet Sam Gyimah, the Ghanaian gunning to become British Prime Minister

Sam Gyimah is seeking to become the British Prime Minister play videoSam Gyimah is seeking to become the British Prime Minister

Amid the Brexit crisis, British Prime Minister Theresa May has announced that she will resign as the leader of the Conservative Party and Prime Minister on June 7, 2019.

Already, the race to succeed Theresa May is heating up with 13 people, as of Sunday, June 2, 2019, declaring their interest.

Among the candidates Sam Gyimah, the current MP for East Surrey and a former minister in the May government.

Gyimah declared his intention on Sunday during an interview on Sky’s Sophy Ridge On Sunday.

“I will be joining the contest to be the next Conservative leader and prime minister to broaden the race. There is a wide range of candidates out there but there is a very narrow set of views on Brexit being discussed," he said among other things.

So who is Sam Gyimah?

As his surname clearly suggests, Gyimah is of Ghanaian descent. He was born Samuel Phillip Gyimah to Ghanaian parents at Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire.

At the age of six, his parents split up. Gyimah's mother returned to Ghana with him and his two other siblings while his father remained in the UK.

Gyimah stayed in Ghana for about 10 years and attended the Achimota School before going black to the UK to his GCSEs and A-levels at Freman College.

He then attended the Somerville College at the University of Oxford, where he read Politics, Philosophy and Economics, and was elected President of the Oxford Union.

After school, Gyimah was employed as an investment banker by Goldman Sachs before he set his own firm in 2003.

His firm, Clearstone Training and Recruitment Limited folded up in 2007.

In 2010, Gyimah was elected an MP during general elections and he held various positions in David Cameron's government.

Gyimah was appointed a Minister of State for Universities, Science, Research and Innovation in January 2018 but he had to resign in November 2018 in order to to be able to criticise May over her Brexit deal.

If successful, Gyimah who was born on August 10, 1976, will become the first black man to become a UK Prime Minister.