BRUSSELS, Aug 1 — European governments widened their search for a new head of the International Monetary Fund, extending a deadline to 1800 GMT today so that Britain can put forward a candidate.

EU finance ministers, having failed to reach a consensus, will also hold a series of votes from tomorrow morning to choose their favourite of six candidates, a French finance ministry official and two other European sources said.

The five declared candidates are: Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Dutch former head of euro zone finance ministers; Nadia Calvino, the Spanish economy minister; Olli Rehn, the Finnish central bank governor; Mario Centeno, the Portuguese chairman of euro zone finance ministers; and Bulgaria’s World Bank chief executive Kristalina Georgieva.

An as yet unnamed British candidate — who is not expected to be Bank of England governor Mark Carney — will join them.

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France said the decision to allow a British candidate was made because London had a new prime minister, but that all 28 EU countries still wanted a single European candidate.

“All the ministers share the goal of a consensus on a single European candidate,” the French finance ministry official said.

The top job at the Washington-based global lender has historically been filled by a European. Outgoing IMF head Christine Lagarde is taking over from Mario Draghi as European Central Bank president.

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Officials have told Reuters that Carney, who holds Canadian, British and Irish passports, was not considered European enough. — Reuters