William Hague will be as the next head of Foreign Affairs

The Conservative leader David Cameron succeeded yesterday evening to Gordon Brown to the position of Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and will govern with a coalition "full answer and defence", according to his own words, between his party and the Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg.

Discussions between labour and the Lib Dems to form a "progressive alliance" centre-left failed, Gordon Brown presented his resignation to his residence from 10 Downing Street a little after 19 hours. Explaining that he had liked his trade of Prime Minister "not for the pump" but for the opportunities to make the country "more prosperous and more just", he explained that he would "submit his resignation to the Queen" and "if it accepted it", it him "advise" to call the leader of the opposition.

At the same location, an hour later, David Cameron, with his wife Samantha at his side, gave tribute to his predecessor. He explained that he and Nick Clegg had put away their differences"and said that he wanted to work for a society in which citizens"does ask not what the country needs them, but how they can contribute", while ensuring that it would protect the most fragile.

Britain has not ruled by a coalition for a long time and some worry that it is unstable and that new elections are necessary at a time where tremendous sacrifices will be requested from the citizens to restore public finances and where the book is under the oversight of markets.

Impossible Coalition

According to the first information filtering yesterday evening, George Osborne, a faithful old less than forty years, the tory leader, should become Chancellor of the Exchequer, a key post. He would be assisted to this position by Vincent Cable, the right arm of Nick Clegg on economic issues. The rumor gave Nick Clegg, the man who has succeeded in placing his party at the centre of the British political landscape, as "Deputy Prime Minister." William Hague will be as the next head of Foreign Affairs. More details will be announced today.

Investors in the City had allowed these perspectives with satisfaction from the middle of the afternoon and the book was part of the ground lost since the announcement that Gordon Brown is sacrificed so that a Labour-Lib Dems alliance is possible. Richard Lambert, the President of the French Medef, said his satisfaction yesterday, noting that the priority was to restore the public accounts.

The heart of a large part of the Liberal Democrats, including Paddy Ashdown, a former leader of Lib Dems who had dreamed with Tony Blair in the past, tilted towards an alliance with the left who had the power to exclude the right for a generation. " But with Vincent Cable, the majority of their elected representatives resigned to consider that the current political circumstances made this impossible coalition, the two parties having not shone on May 6.

The Liberal Democrats are doing well negotiations of the last five days. David Cameron offered a referendum on the adoption of a system of alternative vote to the Liberal Democrats (VA) to replace the electorates in a current tour. The will is to give opportunity to voters, rather than to a single cross before the name of their candidate preferred as today, rank the candidates in order of preference. If no candidate gets 50 percent of the vote as a choice number one, there are the votes as a choice number two, etc., until a winner has at least 50. It is a concession to Tory politicians, whom many would be below the 50 currently, according to one of their "senior" cited by the "Guardian".