LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Theresa May announced her resignation on Friday after her new exit plan was rejected by opposition lawmakers and many members of her ruling party.

The newspaper said - without being quoted from any source - that will remain in office until the election of a successor in a two-stage process, in which two finalists compete for the votes of 125 thousand voters of the members of the Conservative Party.

Many senior members of the Conservative Party, including members of the government, are campaigning to succeed May.

Visit Trump
British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said Tuesday that the prime minister will be in office when US President Donald Trump visits Britain in early June.

Mai is under intense pressure from within her party to set a date for her resignation after her last attempt to end Britain's exit crisis failed.

The British government has decided to postpone a crucial vote on the planned Bricast plan, scheduled for the week of June 3, following protests by hardline Brikst supporters over concessions by the prime minister.

Mai had planned to publish the bill on Friday in the hope of voting early next month, but she faced calls from deputies in her party to withdraw and resign.

Settlement procedures
On Tuesday, the British official presented a package of "settlement measures" aimed at obtaining the support of deputies from the opposition Labor Party, including giving the parliament the opportunity to vote for a second referendum on the bricast.

May is expected to meet tomorrow with the head of the committee, which includes the deputies of the back seats in her party to discuss its future, amid deep resentment about its handling of the file of the bricast.

British lawmakers have rejected the three-fold agreement, prompting the planned March 29 exit to be postponed until Oct. 31, and the deal still faces wide opposition from Britain's main parties, workers and conservatives.