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Tory leadership: Boris Johnson leads with 114 votes as Leadsom, McVey and Harper knocked out – live | Tory leadership: Boris Johnson leads with 114 votes as Leadsom, McVey and Harper knocked out – live |
(32 minutes later) | |
Here is a graph with the results. | |
Full results of the Conservative leadership election - round 1 | |
Here is Jeremy Hunt commenting on the result. | |
Delighted to come second today. We face a crucial choice: who can negotiate some better choices than the bad ones we face. The stakes have rarely been higher for our country. This serious moment calls for a serious leader. #hastobehunt | |
“Serious leader” is, of course, code for “not Boris Johnson”. | |
This is from Rory Stewart. | |
This is amazing - we’re getting some real momentum here. Thank you so, so much. Let’s push this through to the end. It’s increasingly clear it’s me against Boris. And let’s win #rorywalks pic.twitter.com/YvvAf8oEE5 | |
Here is a Labour response to the Rory Stewart interview. | |
If only there had been an opportunity to stop this potentially happening yesterday, which he originally said he’d vote for, before swiftly changing his mind and voting against? https://t.co/Fs3eK7kd6G | |
Rory Stewart has just given an extraordinary interview, PoliticsHome’s Kevin Schofield and BuzzFeed’s Alex Wickham report. I will post the quotes in a moment. | |
Woah. Rory Stewart says that if PM Boris Johnson prorogued Parliament to force through a no-deal Brexit "we will hold our own session of Parliament across the road in Methodist Central Hall and we will bring him down". | |
Rory Stewart on Sky: "If Boris Johnson dared to lock the doors of parliament we would bring him down". That TV debate is gonna be something now Rory is thru... | |
Rory Stewart told BBC News that he was “completely over the moon” at securing 19 votes, saying that a new poll on the ConservativeHome website putting him as the second choice to Boris Johnson among Tory members “must have been what turned around the final few”. | |
Asked how he could build on the still relatively low number, to reach the 33 needed to progress past Tuesday’s second round, he said: | |
You build on it by just saying this message, which is about being radical, about being brave in the centre ground, about getting out and listening to people, is extraordinarily popular. None of these other candidates at the moment are really tapping into this. | |
Stewrart added: | |
What I’m discovering is that a Conservative message, delivered properly, and if you listen in the right way, is incredibly popular, and that’s what I have to get across to colleagues. | |
On Brexit, Stewart said he wanted to get across his message by asking colleagues to focus “on the practical issues – how do we get this done”, saying that Johnson’s Brexit strategy was very hazy. | |
Amber Rudd, who is backing Jeremy Hunt, denied that it was disappointing to see him so far behind Boris Johnson. | |
“Not at all,” she told the BBC. “He came a good second, he got more than Matt and Saj combined, and that’s what we were after – a clear lead in second place. It’s only the first round, there’s a few more rounds to go. I’m delighted.” | |
While Johnson was well ahead, Rudd said, once the race was down to a final two it would “start again” in hustings to members in which “anything can happen”. | |
Here are the key points. | |
Boris Johnson is the runaway winner of the first round - and is now looking unstoppable for next prime minister. With 114 votes, he is 31 votes ahead of the declared supporters he had this morning and well above the threshold of 105 he needs to ensure he makes it into the final two for the ballot of party members. For him not to get on the final ballot, he would have to start losing quite a number of MPs - which is almost unthinkable. Of course, in a campaign amongst the membership he could be overtaken by a surprise outsider, but this will be a short campaign (not a months-long contest, like the 2005 that allowed David Cameron to come from behind) and postal ballots will be going out soon after the parliament phase of the process ends next week. In postal ballots people often vote early, and there is clear evidence that a majority of members back Johnson. (See 9.46am.) | |
Jeremy Hunt came second - but it was a poor second (he had fewer than half the votes Johnson had) and he was only six votes ahead of Michael Gove, in third place. Hunt had six more votes that he had declared supporters this morning, and Gove just three more. The main interest over the next week will be which of those two wins the contest to take on Johnson. Hunt is probably favourite, but the two men are close enough for Gove to still be in the running. | |
Dominic Raab, who came fourth, Sajid Javid, who came fifth, and Matt Hancock, who came sixth, are probably all now effectively out of contention. Not one of them reached 33 votes - the threshold that will be needed to survive after the next ballot, on Tuesday. They may decide to fight on (there are 30 votes from candidates who have been eliminated to be redistributed) but they will all have to decide whether it makes sense to continue, or whether they would do better packing in now and pledging support to a rival camp (on the basis that the sooner one gets on board, the better the rewards might be). Raab’s campaign was probably doomed as soon as Johnson tied up a large change of the ERG (European Research Group) vote. Javid, who holds one of the top four jobs in cabinet and at one point was seen as a favourite to succeed Theresa May, will be wondering where it all went wrong. (“Strong fifth”, to quote one of his supporters - see 1.28pm - is an oxymoron.) And Hancock was always a longshot. | |
Rory Stewart will probably be pleasantly surprised with this performance, given that he is standing in a Tory leadership contest on a non-Tory platform. This result will give him a slot in the Channel 4 hustings on Sunday. His non-conventional, bohemian campaigning style has struck a chord with the liberal commentariat (aka Twitter), but it is hard to see him picking up many more votes. | |
Andrea Leadsom, Mark Harper, and Esther McVey have all been eliminated, coming 8th, 9th and 10th respectively. There does not come as a great surprise about this, but the fact that the only two women in the contest did so badly does not say a lot for the party’s egalitarianism. Only three years ago Leadsom was runner up in the leadership contest, and today’s result confirms how much her political stock has fallen since then. Many of the Leadsom and McVey (20 in all) will probably go to Johnson. | |
As the results were announced today, I was one of the people made to sit longingly in the corridor while results were announced as I wasn’t signed up to go in.But I did as a result get to watch the results go live in the corridor with an influential Boris Johnson supporter. He laughed at Jeremy Hunt’s result – 43 votes – saying,“Well that’s embarrassing isn’t it!” | |
He said that the Johnson team hadn’t been bluffing when they estimated fewer votes for Boris (he got 114) but: “It wasn’t a bluff his result was past expectations but obviously there is still a long way to go.” | |
Robert Halfon, the Harlow MP who is supporting Sajid Javid, said the home secretary had come in a “strong fifth place”. | Robert Halfon, the Harlow MP who is supporting Sajid Javid, said the home secretary had come in a “strong fifth place”. |
“It’s all to play for,” he told reporters after the vote. | “It’s all to play for,” he told reporters after the vote. |
The public figures were 17 to 19 votes, and Jajid got 23. The momentum’s building up. We’ve got Ruth Davidson on our side, so we’re really happy. | The public figures were 17 to 19 votes, and Jajid got 23. The momentum’s building up. We’ve got Ruth Davidson on our side, so we’re really happy. |
Obviously Boris Johnson is well ahead, but Sajid has come up. He’s clearly a very strong candidate, building up momentum all week. | Obviously Boris Johnson is well ahead, but Sajid has come up. He’s clearly a very strong candidate, building up momentum all week. |
Esther McVey has issued this statement. | Esther McVey has issued this statement. |
I am extremely grateful to those people who voted for me in this election and to the fantastic team who have supported my campaign. | I am extremely grateful to those people who voted for me in this election and to the fantastic team who have supported my campaign. |
I am pleased to have had a platform to make the case for Blue Collar Conservatism, a clean break from the EU and the need to invest money into schools, policing and a proper pay rise for our public sector workers. | I am pleased to have had a platform to make the case for Blue Collar Conservatism, a clean break from the EU and the need to invest money into schools, policing and a proper pay rise for our public sector workers. |
I will speak to the remaining candidates to see who is best placed to deliver on that programme. | I will speak to the remaining candidates to see who is best placed to deliver on that programme. |
I wish the remaining candidates well and I hope that all Conservative MPs will unite behind whoever wins this contest which is essential to prevent the disaster of a Marxist government. | I wish the remaining candidates well and I hope that all Conservative MPs will unite behind whoever wins this contest which is essential to prevent the disaster of a Marxist government. |
Whoever becomes the new leader will certainly receive my support. | Whoever becomes the new leader will certainly receive my support. |
Gillan says seven candidates are eligible to go through to the next round, and three of them - Mark Harper, Andrea Leadsom and Esther McVey - have been eliminated. | Gillan says seven candidates are eligible to go through to the next round, and three of them - Mark Harper, Andrea Leadsom and Esther McVey - have been eliminated. |
Cheryl Gillan, the joint acting chairman of the 1922 Committee, is now reading out the results. | Cheryl Gillan, the joint acting chairman of the 1922 Committee, is now reading out the results. |
All 313 Tory MPs voted, she says. There were no spoilt ballot papers. | All 313 Tory MPs voted, she says. There were no spoilt ballot papers. |
Boris Johnson - 114 | Boris Johnson - 114 |
Jeremy Hunt - 43 | Jeremy Hunt - 43 |
Michael Gove - 37 | Michael Gove - 37 |
Dominic Raab - 27 | Dominic Raab - 27 |
Sajid Javid - 23 | Sajid Javid - 23 |
Matt Hancock - 20 | Matt Hancock - 20 |
Rory Stewart - 19 | Rory Stewart - 19 |
Mark Harper - 10 | Mark Harper - 10 |
Andrea Leadsom - 11 | Andrea Leadsom - 11 |
Esther McVey - 9 | Esther McVey - 9 |
Only 2 leadership candidates in room for this ballot announcement: Raab and Stewart. Make of that what you will. | Only 2 leadership candidates in room for this ballot announcement: Raab and Stewart. Make of that what you will. |
Leadership candidates starting to arrive for leadership count. Dominic Raab and Rory Stewart here. Boris Johnson 'not coming', according to a supporter: 'He's holed up in his office' | Leadership candidates starting to arrive for leadership count. Dominic Raab and Rory Stewart here. Boris Johnson 'not coming', according to a supporter: 'He's holed up in his office' |