This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/nov/16/rebel-tory-mps-press-for-vote-of-no-confidence-in-theresa-may

The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 2 Version 3
Rebel Tory MPs press for vote of no confidence in Theresa May Growing number of Tory MPs join attempt to topple Theresa May
(about 5 hours later)
Four more Conservative MPs have submitted letters expressing no confidence in Theresa May amid growing speculation in Westminster that a confidence vote could come later in the day. Theresa May is battling to halt a growing revolt from the Tory right after half a dozen more backbenchers came out in favour of a no-confidence vote and the organiser of the rebellion publicly predicted more MPs would follow next week.
Maria Caulfield, Adam Holloway, John Whittingdale and Chris Green said they could no longer support the prime minister, taking to 21 the number of letters MPs say they have submitted demanding a vote. The prime minister held a conference call with local association chairmen on Friday afternoon as she fought to head off a coup and sell her hard-won Brexit deal to a sceptical and partially hostile party.
Forty-eight Tory MPs have to write to the chair of the party’s backbench 1922 Committee to trigger a confidence vote in May, which would happen within a day or two of being announced. She would then need the backing of 158 MPs to keep her job. Her efforts came after the number of backbenchers calling publicly for a no-confidence vote in May’s leadership increased to 23. Rebellious MPs said they were confident of reaching the required threshold of 48 letters to Sir Graham Brady, the chairman of the party’s 1922 Committee.
Holloway wrote on his Facebook page on Thursday that his letter had been delivered “with regret”. He added: “But as we see from the events of today, you cannot have someone leading a mission who does not believe in the mission. The country needs leadership.” Adam Holloway, one of the MPs demanding a vote, said his letter had been delivered “with regret”. But, complaining about May’s Brexit plans, he added: “You cannot have someone leading a mission who does not believe in the mission. The country needs leadership.”
Caulfield told BBC Sussex she had sent a no-confidence letter on Thursday night. Others who went public with their demand to hold a vote included the former cabinet minister John Whittingdale, Maria Caulfield, Marcus Fysh, and Chris Green. David Jones was also named as being among those who had written to Brady. The party rules allow for a no-confidence vote if 15% of the party’s MPs currently 48 submit letters. Brady would organise a vote within a couple of working days of the threshold being met.
In a statement, Whittingdale said: “I want the government to pursue a proper free trade agreement which does deliver the Brexit objectives but which keeps us as close to Europe as possible. Whittingdale said he wanted the government “to pursue a proper free trade agreement” but he believed that May was not willing to do so. “Therefore I felt there is no alternative but to seek a vote of confidence,” he said.
“I believe that is on offer from the European Union but it is clear that the prime minister is unwilling to move from her existing position. Therefore I felt there is no alternative but to seek a vote of confidence.” Fysh tweeted: “I do think the PM needs to resign as she is no longer honouring the Referendum result”. Green tweeted: “With a heavy heart, I confirm that I have put my letter in calling for a vote of no confidence in the prime minister, Theresa May.”
Green tweeted: “With a heavy heart, I confirm that I have put my letter in calling for a vote of no confidence in the prime minister, Theresa May.” The organiser of the rebellion, Steve Baker, said he thought the 48 letter threshold would be exceeded “more likely next week” and “colleagues would want to see their associations” so they could test the temperature of the membership of their local party.
On Thursday, Jacob Rees-Mogg, the chair of the hard-Brexit European Research Group, called for a vote of no confidence in May in an impromptu press conference after declaring he had submitted a letter. Earlier in the day, Baker’s credibility on the subject took a knock when he admitted he had sent an over-confident WhatsApp message to colleagues saying that, by his count, more than 48 letters had been already submitted, with around a dozen more probables.
“It is of considerable importance that politicians stick to their commitments or do not make such commitments in the first place. Regrettably, this is not the situation,” he wrote. Rumours circulated at Westminster on Friday that all the Tory whips were working intensively and would continue through the weekend to persuade backbenchers not to put in letters or to change thee minds of those who had. But one source close to the chief whip tried to downplay any sense of crisis: “The only whip I’ve seen working today is the chief.”
He was supported by Steve Baker, a former Brexit minister, the deputy chair of the ERG, who released a letter he had sent towards the end of last month. Earlier today, Baker told an ERG Whatsapp group he believed the 48-letter threshold had been reached but there is no other indication this has in fact taken place. May would require a simple majority of Tory MPs to keep her job as party leader the target is 158. But many in Westminster believe her authority would be so damaged she would be unable to carry on if there was a sizeable rebellion possibly in excess of 100 MPs.
If a confidence vote was triggered on Friday, it would be held early next week, most likely on Tuesday when MPs have returned from their constituencies. The 1922 Committee could invite May to appear before it in a hustings to plead for her job on Monday night. A confident Baker said hard Brexit-supporting Tories would need to come together and agree on a single candidate if May were to fall, in effect choosing between Boris Johnson and David Davis. “What I want is for one Eurosceptic who has been in the cabinet to be our candidate that we back,” Baker said. “I was closely involved in the last leadership election. We cannot afford to tumble forwards with multiple candidates.”
Although May needs a simple majority of Tory MPs to keep her job as party leader, many in Westminster believe that if there was a sizeable rebellion possibly in excess of 100 MPs she would be unable to carry on. On Thursday, Jacob Rees-Mogg, the chair of the European Research Group, called for a vote of no confidence in May at an impromptu press conference after declaring he had submitted a letter. “It is of considerable importance that politicians stick to their commitments or do not make such commitments in the first place. Regrettably, this is not the situation,” he wrote.
Another MP, Mark Francois, who had said on Thursday he would be writing to the 1922 Committee, published his letter on Friday morning. Francois said he and other fellow ERG members had sought to persuade May to stop her Chequers plan for the “Super Canada” model. Another MP, Mark Francois, who had said on Thursday he would be writing to the 1922 Committee, published his letter on Friday morning. He said he and other fellow ERG members had sought to persuade May to stop her Chequers plan for the “super Canada” model. He wrote: “However, in short, no one really listened to a word we said.”
He wrote: “However, in short, no one really listened to a word we said.”
Francois added that May had been “surrounded throughout this process by a Pretorian [sic] Guard of highly pro-European senior civil servants who, I believe, have never accepted the result of the referendum”.
Given the number of resignations, Francois said: “I do not believe that it is in any way possible for the prime minister to repair the damage which she has done, and therefore the Conservative party needs new leadership.”
The other MPs who have publicly declared they have submitted letters are: Ben Bradley, Nadine Dorries, Andrew Bridgen, Sherryl Murray, Simon Clarke, Andrea Jenkyns, James Duddridge, Anne Marie Morris, Peter Bone, Lee Rowley, Philip Davies, Henry Smith, Martin Vickers and Laurence Robertson.The other MPs who have publicly declared they have submitted letters are: Ben Bradley, Nadine Dorries, Andrew Bridgen, Sherryl Murray, Simon Clarke, Andrea Jenkyns, James Duddridge, Anne Marie Morris, Peter Bone, Lee Rowley, Philip Davies, Henry Smith, Martin Vickers and Laurence Robertson.
Rumours at Westminster circulated that there were a further 10 MPs who will say in private that they have put in letters. Rumours circulated in Westminster that there were a further 10 MPs who will say in private that they have put in letters. Friends of Johnson would not say if he had submitted a letter, while Davis has declared he will not be writing in.
Friends of Boris Johnson will not say if he has submitted a letter, while the former Brexit secretary David Davis has declared he will not be writing in. Some notable backbench critics of May’s European policy have not said publicly whether they have written letters, including John Redwood, Sir William Cash and Sir Bernard Jenkin. Some notable backbench critics of May’s European policy have not said publicly whether they have written letters, including John Redwood, Sir William Cash and Sir Bernard Jenkin.
Sir Desmond Swayne, a Brexiter, said he would not be hurried into deciding what to do, arguing he would study May’s Brexit deal closely.
ConservativesConservatives
Theresa MayTheresa May
Conservative leadershipConservative leadership
BrexitBrexit
Article 50Article 50
European UnionEuropean Union
EuropeEurope
newsnews
Share on FacebookShare on Facebook
Share on TwitterShare on Twitter
Share via EmailShare via Email
Share on LinkedInShare on LinkedIn
Share on PinterestShare on Pinterest
Share on Google+Share on Google+
Share on WhatsAppShare on WhatsApp
Share on MessengerShare on Messenger
Reuse this contentReuse this content