Britain's Conservative Party said on Monday it will name its new leader on Nov. 2, following the party's worst-ever election performance this month that prompted former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to say he would stand down.
Sunak will remain acting leader until the appointment of a successor, the Conservative Party said in a statement.
The leadership contest will see the party narrow down the field of nominations to four candidates who will make their case at the Conservative Party conference.
The nominations will further narrow down to two candidates, following which party members will vote for a leader.
The Times, which was first to report the contest, said up to eight candidates were expected to put their names forward.
Sunak's election campaign ended in failure on July 4, when the centre-left Labour Party, led by Keir Starmer, won a landslide victory that ended 14 years of Conservative-led government.
Sunak said in his final speech outside the prime minister's Downing Street office that he would quit as leader of the party once formal arrangements for his successor were in place.
Thailand's Queen Mother Sirikit, who brought glamour and elegance to a postwar revival in the country's monarchy and in later years, would occasionally wade into politics, has passed away at the age of 93, the Thai Royal Household Bureau said on Saturday.
The Louvre has transferred some of its most precious jewels to the Bank of France, according to French radio RTL, after an audacious daylight heist last week exposed the famed museum's security vulnerability.
Two people were killed and 13 others injured in Kyiv after Russian missiles and drones hit sites in Ukraine overnight, including infrastructure and energy sites, Ukrainian officials said on Saturday.
Thailand's prime minister Anutin Charnvirakul will travel to Malaysia on Saturday to sign a ceasefire deal with Cambodia and meet with US President Donald Trump, but will cut short his attendance at the ASEAN Summit there due to the death of the Thai Queen Mother Sirikit.