Tories
will pick new leader in November after agreeing extended timetable
Four MPs
will be shortlisted before party conference, with Badenoch, Cleverly, Tugendhat
and Patel current favourites
Eleni Courea
Political correspondent
Mon 22 Jul
2024 22.11 BST
The
Conservatives will elect their new leader in November after the party agreed to
an extended timetable to replace Rishi Sunak.
Four
Conservative MPs will be shortlisted by the parliamentary party to make their
pitch to colleagues and members at party conference in October. Sunak will
remain acting leader until his successor is agreed.
Among those
said to be preparing to throw their hats into the ring are Kemi Badenoch, the
shadow communities secretary; James Cleverly, the shadow home secretary; Tom
Tugendhat, the shadow security minister; and Priti Patel, Suella Braverman and
Robert Jenrick.
The
timetable was agreed after a series of meetings of the Conservative party board
and the 1922 Committee of backbench MPs, where there were contrasting views
about how long the leadership election should be.
“People
argued we shouldn’t have a leadership election until next year, others wanted
[Sunak] to go immediately,” one Tory involved in the discussions said. The
source said the agreed timetable was a “compromise”.
Those who
had been pushing for a speedy timetable with a new leader elected by September
argued that the alternative would allow Labour to set the narrative and Nigel
Farage to position himself as the opposition leader.
A senior
Tory said the agreed November timetable was a “foolish decision, which hands
Starmer the next election on a plate. An act of pure self-indulgence which
maximises internal conflict to allow a few media-hungry types to blather on the
broadcast media for a little longer before fading into irrelevance. Farage will
be cock-a-hoop.”
Badenoch is
widely seen as the frontrunner, with polling suggesting she is the most popular
candidate among grassroots membership. However, the extended timetable opens up
the race by giving other candidates the opportunity to make an impression. Two
influential former MPs from different wings of the Conservative party – Damian
Green and Steve Baker – endorsed Tugendhat over the weekend.
Prospective
candidates will need a proposer, a seconder and eight nominations to proceed to
the ballot by MPs. Nominations open on 24 July and close on 29 July. The
parliamentary party will shortlist four candidates in September, who will make
their case to grassroots members at Tory conference in early October.
Conservative
MPs will then whittle the list down to the final two candidates, and Tory
members will elect the winner. The members’ ballot will close on 31 October and
the result will be announced on 2 November. Only those who have been party
members for at least 90 days before voting concludes will be eligible to vote.
Bob
Blackman, the chair of the 1922 Committee, will act as returning officer for
the election. Once the parliamentary process is completed, Conservative
campaign headquarters will oversee the vote by members, which will be conducted
online.
Sunak said
it was “in the national interest for us to have a smooth and orderly transition
to a new leader” and that the timetable agreed would “allow for a thoughtful,
professional and respectful contest”.
Blackman
said the country and Tory members “want to see us engaged in proper debate not
personal attacks”.
Richard
Fuller, a Tory MP and chair of the party, said the process agreed “has party
members at its heart”.
“Party
conference will be a great opportunity for our hard-working volunteers to meet
the leading candidates and make their views known to MPs before the final two
candidates are put to a final vote by party members.”
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