Mosley wants to step down as FIA chief next year

Sat Apr 19, 2008 9:08pm EDT
 
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LONDON (Reuters) - World motorsport chief Max Mosley wants to complete his term at the FIA and step down voluntarily next year after 16 years as president.

In an interview with The Sunday Telegraph he defended his right to a private life and said it had no effect on his ability to run the International Automobile Federation.

Mosley is suing The News of the World for unlimited damages for publishing revelations about his involvement in what was depicted as a Nazi-style sado-masochistic orgy with prostitutes.

His future will be the subject of an extraordinary meeting of the FIA general assembly in Paris on June 3, which he asked to be called, during which he faces a vote of confidence.

He told the Telegraph he intends to address the meeting.

"If they wish me to continue, I will continue, if they don't, I'll stop," said the 68-year-old. "But I will also say to them that it was always my intention, because it is, that I was never going to go beyond 2009.

"The reason's very simple, If you stop in 2009, aged 69, you can maybe still do something else useful. Were I to stay on till I was 73, I'd be getting very marginal."

Mosley has faced calls to resign from former drivers and the Automobile Association of America (AAA), the largest motoring organization in the world with 51 million members in the U.S.

Australian driver Mark Webber would not comment on whether Mosley should resign but he told the BBC on Saturday:  Continued...

 
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