Priti Patel knocked out of Tory leadership contest
Former cabinet minister Priti Patel has been knocked out of the Conservative leadership contest in the first round of voting by Tory MPs.
The former immigration minister Robert Jenrick topped the poll of MPs with 28 votes followed by Kemi Badenoch on 22 votes.
Third was James Cleverly with 21, fourth was Tom Tugendhat with 17, fifth was Mel Stride with 16 and last was Dame Priti on 14.
Voting will continue in the coming weeks until there are two candidates left, leaving party members to pick one of them to be the new leader.
The winner will replace Rishi Sunak, who stood down as party leader after leading the Conservatives to their worst performance at a general election in July.
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Another vote will be held next Tuesday to whittle the field down to four candidates before the party’s annual conference at the end of September.
An intensive round of hustings and multiple votes will follow the conference from 8 October, lasting three days, until only two candidates are left.
Conservative Party members will then choose which of the final two candidates they want as the new leader, with the result announced on 2 November.
A few dozen Conservative MPs gathered in a Parliamentary committee room for the result of the first ballot, their numbers much depleted following July’s election defeat.
As the home secretary in former Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government, Dame Priti developed a reputation as a law-and-order Conservative.
Known for her tough stance on immigration, Dame Priti spearheaded the Conservative government’s flagship scheme to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda.
In her leadership campaign, she promised to unite the party, get it match fit for the next general election, and give members a greater voice.
Six Conservatives entered the contest to succeed Mr Sunak over the summer.
In August, Mr Jenrick said the Conservatives could win the next general election but needed to “confront some hard truths”.
Mr Jenrick is attempting to appeal to Reform UK voters with promises to control the UK’s borders and reduce immigration.
Mr Stride has positioned himself as a steady hand who can restore the credibility of the Conservative Party after its historic defeat in the general election.
The former work and pensions secretary believes he can unite the party to win back the public’s trust.
The remaining three contenders launched their leadership campaigns in London this week.
Mrs Badenoch, who is topping polls of Tory members, said her party needed to “stop acting like Labour” to win back power at her leadership launch on Monday.
She said that to win back the trust of the public the Tories “can’t just sit around pointing out how terrible Labour are” and “having the same policy arguments of the last Parliament”.
In his opening pitch for the leadership, Mr Cleverly called for his party to “think and act like Conservatives again” and embrace a smaller role for the state.
A former home secretary, Mr Cleverly has pledged to bring back the Rwanda scheme if he is elected next Conservative leader and prime minister, albeit in a different form.
Mr Tugendhat’s offer has been focused on defence and immigration, as he attempts to woo MPs on the right of his party.
The former security minister said he was willing to leave the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) if it prevented the government from deporting foreign criminals and he was unable to reform it.
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Published at Wed, 04 Sep 2024 15:23:43 +0000