The long process to select a new Conservative party leader has begun after Rishi Sunak announced he was standing down following his party’s mauling at the general election.
Nominations for the former Prime Minister’s replacement opened on Wednesday, July 24 at 7pm and closed at 2.30pm on Monday, July 29.
Six candidates announced they would be standing for the job: Robert Jenrick, Kemi Badenoch, Mel Stride, Tom Tugendhat, James Cleverly and Dame Priti Patel.
To be considered each contender needed the backing of at least ten Tory MPs. The parliamentary party will narrow the list down to four candidates, who will make their case to members at the Conservative Conference in Birmingham in the autumn.
Two final two candidates will then be subject to a vote by Conservative Party members and the winner announced on November 2.
Here are the runners and riders:
James Cleverly
Mr Cleverly was the first out of the gate, announcing he would be running for leader the day before nominations opened. Having served as education secretary, foreign secretary, and home secretary, Mr Cleverly is one of the more experienced contenders. While popular within the party, he is seen as occasionally gaffe prone. He has said he has “given serious thought” to making a bid to lead the Conservatives and warned rivals not to “divide up and factionalise” the party.
Tom Tugendhat supported Liz Truss for leader
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Tom Tugendhat
The ex-security minister and former soldier is a favourite of the party’s centrist One Nation caucus and is likely to be backed by MPs worried about the Tories lurching significantly to the right. However he began his campaign by suggesting he was open to leaving the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) and was forced to defend previously backing Liz Truss for prime minister. He stood to replace Boris Johnson in 2022, but was eliminated in the third round of parliamentary voting.
Robert Jenrick
The right-leaning former immigration minister resigned his frontbench job over the previous government’s Rwanda scheme, stating it was not strong enough. He is now second favourite to become leader and has said the Conservative party is the “natural home for Reform voters”. But a scandal involving an east London housing scheme may come back to haunt his bid. In 2020 it emerged that then housing secretary Mr Jenrick had intervened to approve billionaire Richard Desmond’s Westferry Printworks development on the Isle of Dogs after the pair had sat next to each other at a Tory fundraising dinner. Documents later suggested Mr Jenrick had taken a particular interest in the plans and officials stated that he was “insistent” that it be approved before a local council charge worth about £40m was imposed. He was later sacked by Boris Johnson in a reshuffle.
Robert Jenrick was second favouriteto become Conservative Party leader
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Mel Stride
At the general election Mr Stride clung on to his Central Devon seat by just 61 votes over Labour. The shadow work and pensions secretary said “a number of colleagues” have urged him to launch a Conservative leadership bid. Becoming the fourth MP to announce his run, hw said the Tory Party had "substantially lost the trust of the British people" as well as its "reputation for competence". He’s also warned the party it faces a “painstaking” battle to win over young voters and argued against “ideological labels” when pressed on whether he would seek to prevent a rightward shift in the party.
Kemi Badenoch
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The combative former business secretary, and darling of the Tory right, is currently favourite to succeed Rishi Sunak. She came fourth in the Conservative leadership contest to replace Boris Johnson in July 2022. But William Hill has her drifting from 11/8 out to 13/8 to win the leadership following a surge in support for James Cleverly and Robert Jenrick. She ann
Priti Patel
The former home secretary and Boris Johnson loyalist refused to stand for the leadership in 2022 despite having a number of Tory MP backers. She is seen as a candidate who may be able to unite the right of the party and its more moderate ‘One Nation’ members. Launching her leadership bid she told Conservative members that she could turn the party "back into a winning machine".
Suella Braverman has denied she plans to defect to Reform UK
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Who didn’t make it?
Suella Braverman
Another former home secretary who is very much on the right of the Conservative party. She has been forced to deny she plans to defect to Reform UK. A day before nominations closed, she dropped out of the leadership contest claiming her party is not willing to confront the “woke virus”. But critics speculated she did not have the numbers of MP supporters needed to launch a campaign. Her attacks on her own party with claims it risked becoming full of "centrist cranks" may have alienated moderate Tory MPs.