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In her letter of resignation, she stated that she will support Liz Truss as our new prime minister and expressed her congratulations on being chosen as our new leader.

Digital Desk: In a letter to departing Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday, UK Home Secretary Priti Patel announced her resignation from the Cabinet and that she will support Liz Truss from the opposition benches in Parliament.

It was widely anticipated that the senior minister of Indian descent, who was close to Johnson, wouldn't be on Prime Minister-elect Truss' top team.

The 50-year-old Patel outlined her numerous accomplishments in the position in her resignation letter to Johnson, including the Migration and Mobility Partnership she forged with India and other nations to combat illegal immigration.

In her letter of resignation, she stated that she will support Liz Truss as our new prime minister and expressed her congratulations on being chosen as our new leader.

Once Liz officially assumes office and a new Home Secretary is named, I have decided to continue serving the nation and the Witham constituency from the opposition benches. I will advocate for many of the programmes and causes that I have supported both inside and outside of government from the backbenches, she declared.

She wrote, referring to some of her work as the head of the Home Office, "I have signed new international returns agreements with India, Albania, Serbia, Nigeria, and Pakistan, with work underway to negotiate more agreements and to remove more people who should not be in this country and who have abused our hospitality."

Another minister of Indian ancestry, Suella Braverman, is anticipated to receive the Home Secretary's job.

Gujarati-origin Patel, who was named Home Secretary by Boris Johnson in July 2019, said it was an honour to implement reforms for the nation's immigration and police systems as well as the battle against terrorism.

Her letter also makes reference to a contentious Rwandan asylum policy that deports unlawful immigrants there as part of a larger effort to combat illegal immigration.

She writes that in order to guarantee the complete implementation and delivery of the New Plan for Immigration and Nationality and Borders Act, it is essential that your successor support all facets of these policies on illegal immigration.

The 50-year-old Johnson supporter and MP for Witham in Essex was one of a select group of front-line ministers who decided not to publicly endorse either of the two candidates for Tory leadership, Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak.

Earlier on Monday, she complimented her former boss in front of MPs from the opposition, ordering them to stop interjecting.

She remarked, "I'm proud to work for this administration and I'd like to thank the Prime Minister, Mr. Boris Johnson.

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