Here’s our best stab at who is voting for whom, and this list will be updated each morning, as the contest continues.
Will Stewart’s transfers now move most to Javid, if he stays in, or to Hunt or to Gove in tomorrow’s fourth ballot?
The arrival of a new Prime Minister might offer some opportunity to reset the relationship.
“The question is who is best placed to…ask testing questions…who has the vision of Britain that’s going to excite people?”
The order of runners-up remains unchanged as today’s third ballot looms: Stewart, Gove, Hunt, Javid.
He could survive tomorrow’s ballot. If he doesn’t, his supporters will have to ask themselves what sort of final they want.
From the blog of the University of Liverpool academic: his detailed breakdown of the contest.
The International Development Secretary is a marmite candidate among Party members: you love him or you loathe him.
A big question today for Conservative MPs is: what sort of final stage, when the contest goes to the members, do they want?
From the blog of the University of Liverpool academic: his detailed breakdown of the contest.
Our hero is lobbied by the teams of four of the candidates – and by the fifth in person…
From the blog of the University of Liverpool academic: his detailed breakdown of the contest.
Each week, we’ll be summarising the announcements made by those vying to succeed May as Prime Minister.
Each week, our panel of John O’Sullivan, Rachel Wolf, Trevor Phillips, Tim Montgomerie and Marcus Roberts will analyse and assess what’s happening.
For most in our groups, the strongest candidates were Johnson, Hunt and Javid, though Stewart had also stuck in several people’s minds.
Each week, our panel of John O’Sullivan, Rachel Wolf, Trevor Phillips, Tim Montgomerie and Marcus Roberts will analyse and assess what’s happening.