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Resignation of Chris Huhne

Prime Minister David Cameron has responded to the resignation of Energy Secretary Chris Huhne.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government

The Prime Minister has written to Chris Huhne following his resignation as Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change.

The Prime Minister wrote:

Thank you for your letter informing me of your decision to resign from the government. I believe you have made the right decision under the circumstances.

You have made a very significant contribution to the government, of which you can be justly proud.

You were a member of the team which negotiated the formation of the coalition government between the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats in those crucial days after the general election, with our shared commitment to come together as two distinct political parties and govern in the national interest.

As Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, you have led the government’s efforts to live up to its responsibility to tackle climate change with great passion and distinction. You played a key role in securing the progress made at the Cancun and Durban summits, and I pay tribute to the leadership you showed at both. You have been determined to deliver on our pledge that this should be the greenest government ever, recognising that cutting carbon emissions is not a luxury but a necessity. And you have relentlessly championed green growth.

Thank you too for the important contribution you have made as a member of the National Security Council since its inception, not only on security of our energy supply, but also in our discussions on Afghanistan, and during the Libya campaign.

Like the Deputy Prime Minister, I am sorry to see you leave the government under these circumstances and wish you well for the future.

The Prime Minister was responding to the letter of resignation written by Chris Huhne:

This letter is to submit with much regret my resignation as Energy and Climate Change Secretary. I intend to mount a robust defence against the charges brought against me, and I have concluded that it would be distracting both to that effort and to my official duties if I were to continue in office.

It has been an honour to negotiate and then serve in the first coalition government of modern times which has substantial achievements both in reducing the economic dangers faced by our country, and in making progress with policies to tackle climate change and provide energy security.  Internationally, we have helped to build a coalition of ambitious countries in Europe and beyond to put the United Nations process back on track.

It has been a privilege to be a minister in the coalition government, and I wish the administration every success with the environmental and economic challenges that lie ahead.

Published 3 February 2012