Kemi Badenoch launches bid to be Conservative leader
- Published
Former equalities minister Kemi Badenoch has become the latest Conservative MP to enter the race to become the next party leader and PM.
Confirming her candidacy in the Times, external, Ms Badenoch said she wanted a limited government and to "tell the truth".
The most high profile candidate so far is former chancellor Rishi Sunak - who threw his hat into the ring on Friday.
However, a No 10 source has told the BBC there was "real disappointment" with him in Downing Street.
They accused Mr Sunak of having a "short memory", adding: "It was the prime minister who trusted him and gave him a top job when he was a junior minister.
"The prime minister backed him to the hilt. It's a shame it wasn't reciprocated."
Former Brexit minister Steve Baker said he will not stand and announced he will back Attorney General Suella Braverman.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who resigned this week after dozens of government ministers quit, has said he intends to stay on in Downing Street until a successor is chosen.
Senior Conservative backbencher Tom Tugendhat has also launched a leadership bid - four MPs have so far done so.
Meanwhile, others tipped to be considering joining the race include former health secretary Sajid Javid, current Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, and former foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt.
A timetable for the Tory leadership race is due to be confirmed next week and the new prime minister is expected to be in position by September.
Sir Charles Walker, a former joint acting chairman of the 1922 Committee of backbench Tory MPs which will set the rules for the contest, says he anticipates a shortlist of two candidates will be known by 21 July, when Parliament breaks for the summer.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Sir Charles urged the leadership candidates with "no hope" to drop out "for the greater good", adding a winner could potentially be chosen in less than a month.
"You could say no hustings, end of July straight to the membership, we'll have this done and dusted, say, by the end of the first week of August," he said.
'Strong but limited'
Setting out her stall in an opinion article in The Times, Ms Badenoch said a "strong but limited government focussed on the essentials" was needed.
The 42-year-old MP for Saffron Walden - who was among those to resign their government jobs this week - said she would lower taxes, but also have a "tight spending discipline".
"Without change the Conservative Party, Britain and the western world will continue to drift" and rivals will "outpace us economically and outmanoeuvre us internationally", she wrote.
"I'm putting myself forward in this leadership election because I want to tell the truth. It's the truth that will set us free."
She said "people are exhausted by platitudes and empty rhetoric" and an "intellectual grasp of what is required to run the country" is missing.
During her time as equalities minister, Ms Badenoch was criticised by members of the government's LGBT+ advisory panel in March over delays in banning conversion therapy.
She quit as a junior minister alongside four colleagues on Wednesday, saying in a joint-letter that she was stepping down from her two roles with "great regret".
Announcing his leadership bid on Friday, Mr Sunak said: "Someone has to grip this moment and make the right decisions."
The former chancellor said he wanted to "restore trust, rebuild the economy and reunite the country" in a social media video.
Several senior Tory MPs have endorsed Mr Sunak's campaign, including Oliver Dowden, Mark Spencer and Liam Fox.
Mr Dowden, who resigned as party chairman last month, said the former chancellor was the "best person" to lead the country and beat Labour.
Meanwhile, Commons Leader Jacob Rees-Mogg said he would not be supporting Mr Sunak's leadership bid and has criticised the former chancellor's taxation policies.
"I will support a leader who believes in keeping public expenditure under control which I think is essential to deal with inflation," he said on BBC Radio 4's Any Questions programme.
Writing in the Daily Express, Suella Braverman pledged she would bring in "rapid and large tax cuts" as leader.
Wycombe MP Steve Baker said he had realised he would not win if he entered the leadership race and was backing Ms Braverman, who has "great authenticity".
He told BBC Breakfast he was a "huge fan" of Mr Sunak, but suggested he was in an "unfortunate bind" as he would need to defend tax rises he introduced which are "doing more harm than good".
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