Boris Johnson confidence vote: Main contenders to replace British PM

Liz Truss, Jeremy Hunt and Rishi Sunak among Tory MPs who may be in line as successor

British prime minister Boris Johnson’s future could be sealed on Monday evening after at least 54 Tory MPs submitted letters saying they had lost confidence in him. Conservative MPs will vote in a secret ballot to decide his fate, but it will take 180 of them to vote to oust him.

But one of the factors making some MPs hesitant is the lack of an obvious successor. Here are the main contenders jostling for position with a rating out of 10 on their current chances of success, although MPs are taking seriously the idea that a wild-card candidate could end up winning in the event of a contest.

Liz Truss 5/10

The foreign secretary has been burnishing her public profile with Instagram shots of her walking red carpets and channelling Margaret Thatcher by wearing a headscarf while driving a tank. As the first Tory female foreign secretary, she has taken credit for securing the release of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe from an Iranian jail and imposing sanctions on Russian oligarchs, despite a sluggish start and accusations the foreign office was underprepared for war in Ukraine. She has long been wining and dining Tory MPs with her “fizz with Liz” evenings.

Several newer MPs have described her as “terrific” and “a new Maggie”, although there are as many others who use the phrase “bonkers” about her, worrying she has eccentric policy obsessions and an odd public speaking manner. Although a former remainer, she has hardened her position on Brexit and won the trust of some anti-EU colleagues with her proposals to override parts of the Northern Ireland protocol.

READ MORE

Jeremy Hunt 5/10

The former foreign and health secretary was defeated by Johnson last time around and declined to join the cabinet. He has played the role of elder statesman from the backbenches, offering gentle and usually friendly criticism over the government’s Covid mistakes. Firmly on the centrist side of the party, he would have a job convincing the Brexit rank and file, not to mention MPs, that he is the man for the job. But he could be viewed as a calming presence after the tumult of the Johnson years, if the membership are desperate for some stability. Among the general public, he is not a hugely polarising figure, apart from among the medical community who cannot forgive his row with junior doctors during the controversy over their contracts.

Rishi Sunak 4/10

The chancellor was the likely successor, despite his relative political inexperience — until details of his family’s tax affairs sent his popularity plummeting. Sunak had built a public profile due to his press conferences explaining the Covid support schemes, winning him credit for swift action to keep families and businesses afloat. But more recently, he has been criticised as being slow to help people in the cost of living crisis and gaffes that suggest he is out of touch, such as flaunting expensive personal items and building a swimming pool at his Yorkshire mansion. He has a lot of backbench supporters who see him as calm and unflappable. But others believe he may not even want the top job as much as some of his inner circle want it for him, having been bruised by the recent non-dom row and its effect on his family. He could easily quit parliament and return to life in California if his stint as chancellor comes to an end.

Nadhim Zahawi 3/10

The education secretary impressed his party as vaccines minister and did a solid job of neutralising some of the difficult issues facing the Tories on education after the chaos of Gavin Williamson’s tenure during Covid. His backstory as a former refugee from Iraq who came to Britain as a child is impressive but some Tory MPs may worry — as with Sunak — about his wealth, from the expenses-era criticism of him claiming to heat his stables, to his former business dealings in oil and gas.

Sajid Javid 3/10

Javid, like Sunak, would have been a stronger contender were it not for recent revelations about his tax affairs, after he admitted to having been a non-dom before he was an MP. The former banker is now health secretary, having been chancellor, culture secretary, business secretary and communities secretary. He, too, has come from a humble background as the son of a bus driver and has talked interestingly in the past about how public speaking comes less easily to him than some of his privately educated colleagues.

Tom Tugendhat 3/10

The former military man is a favourite among Tory centrists. Although it would be highly unusual to have a new prime minister with no cabinet or shadow cabinet experience, some MPs believe it could be good to have a candidate untainted by the Johnson regime. However, he is relatively untested and some worry his focus is too much on foreign affairs and not on the domestic agenda to be an attractive option.

Penny Mordaunt 2/10

The former defence secretary was tipped for cabinet greatness as a Brexiter but she was viewed as disloyal under Johnson for having backed Jeremy Hunt. She has been one of the more forthright ministers when it comes to criticising the PM over Partygate and appears to be setting herself up for a run at the top job.

Ben Wallace 2/10

The defence secretary is topping ConservativeHome polls of members’ favourite cabinet ministers on account of his handling of the war in Ukraine and the evacuation of Afghanistan. He has very little public profile but Tory MPs say his popularity may have begun to make him consider a bid.

Michael Gove 2/10

Gove has said he would not run again but it cannot be ruled out. He has never been popular with the public but there is a chance Tory MPs could see him as the most experienced and capable operator. Weighing against that, some of his colleagues are concerned about his recent bizarre appearance on BBC Breakfast where he put on accents and last year’s video of him dancing alone in a Scottish nightclub. — Guardian