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Candidates face first cull in battle to be British PM

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The 10 candidates running to replace Britain's outgoing Prime Minister Theresa May face the first round of voting on Thursday -- when at least one will get the chop.

Conservative MPs hold their first secret ballot in the governing party's leadership contest as they begin whittling down the contenders.

All 313 lawmakers can vote and any candidate who does not garner the support of 16 colleagues will drop out. If they all clear that hurdle, the one with the lowest number of votes is knocked out.

May, who remains prime minister, stepped down as the centre-right party's leader on Friday, having failed to deliver her plan for taking Britain out of the European Union after nearly three years in the post.

Bookmakers have ex-foreign secretary Boris Johnson as their odds-on favourite to win the contest to replace her.

Candidates to succeed Theresa May
Candidates to succeed Theresa May
, AFP

The former London mayor launched his campaign on Wednesday, saying he would only take Britain out of the EU without a deal as a "last resort" as he promised to unify a country deeply divided over Brexit.

A cross-party effort to block a chaotic end to the 46-year partnership failed on Wednesday, potentially leaving more room for manoeuvre for a future premier.

Parliament may now have run out of options to block a no-deal Brexit by the next PM, admitted Oliver Letwin, one of the plan's architects.

"I have really struggled very hard to think of every available opportunity and I can't currently think of any more," the Conservative MP told BBC radio on Thursday.

Johnson said that if parliament blocks Brexit completely, "we will reap the whirlwind and we will face mortal retribution from the electorate".

- Drugs and backbiting -

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt is considered Johnson's closest challenger.

Bookmakers have ex-foreign secretary Boris Johnson as their odds-on favourite to win the contest
Bookmakers have ex-foreign secretary Boris Johnson as their odds-on favourite to win the contest
Tolga AKMEN, AFP

Interior minister Sajid Javid, Environment Secretary Michael Gove and former Brexit secretary Dominic Raab also have enough publicly-declared backers to make it through to the second round.

The contest so far has been dominated by revelations of past drug-taking by candidates and bickering over the best way to resolve the Brexit impasse.

But Thursday's voting will reveal each candidate's current level of support.

The ballot takes place in a Houses of Parliament committee room between 10:00am (0900 GMT) and 12:00pm (1100 GMT), with the results expected to be announced around an hour later.

Former pensions secretary Esther McVey and ex-immigration minister Mark Harper are considered the most vulnerable.

McVey is pursuing a no-deal Brexit, arguing that the agreement struck by May keeps Britain too closely tied to the EU. Harper says an extension would be needed beyond the October 31 deadline to secure a deal.

A former investment banker and the son of a Pakistani immigrant bus driver  Sajid Javid  wants to be...
A former investment banker and the son of a Pakistani immigrant bus driver, Sajid Javid, wants to be the face of a modern, multicultural and meritocratic Britain
Tolga AKMEN, AFP

Health Secretary Matt Hancock, who is against no-deal, may have enough votes to scrape through.

"We've got to deliver Brexit; but then we've got to win a majority by appealing to aspirational people in the centre ground of British politics, where there's a gaping hole," he told The Guardian newspaper.

- TV test -

Former House of Commons leader Andrea Leadsom, a managed no-deal supporter, told ITV television she was "very optimistic" of having enough votes to get through.

Meanwhile International Development Secretary Rory Stewart, the contender most vehemently against leaving the EU without a deal, told The Sun newspaper he feared he was still "one or two votes short".

The survivors face their first live television debate on Sunday in a 90-minute programme on Channel 4.

They have another round of hustings before Conservative MPs on Monday before Tuesday's second ballot, when the bar rises from 16 backers to 32, again with the contender with the fewest votes dropping out.

May  who remains prime minister  stepped down as party leader on Friday  having failed to deliver he...
May, who remains prime minister, stepped down as party leader on Friday, having failed to deliver her plan for taking Britain out of the European Union
FABRICE COFFRINI, AFP

After further rounds of voting next week, the party hopes to be down to the last two by the end of June 20.

After weeks of hustings around the country, the 160,000 grass-roots Conservative party members pick the winner, with the result announced in the week beginning July 22.

May will then step down as prime minister and the new leader of the largest party in parliament will be appointed as PM by Queen Elizabeth II.

The 10 candidates running to replace Britain’s outgoing Prime Minister Theresa May face the first round of voting on Thursday — when at least one will get the chop.

Conservative MPs hold their first secret ballot in the governing party’s leadership contest as they begin whittling down the contenders.

All 313 lawmakers can vote and any candidate who does not garner the support of 16 colleagues will drop out. If they all clear that hurdle, the one with the lowest number of votes is knocked out.

May, who remains prime minister, stepped down as the centre-right party’s leader on Friday, having failed to deliver her plan for taking Britain out of the European Union after nearly three years in the post.

Bookmakers have ex-foreign secretary Boris Johnson as their odds-on favourite to win the contest to replace her.

Candidates to succeed Theresa May

Candidates to succeed Theresa May
, AFP

The former London mayor launched his campaign on Wednesday, saying he would only take Britain out of the EU without a deal as a “last resort” as he promised to unify a country deeply divided over Brexit.

A cross-party effort to block a chaotic end to the 46-year partnership failed on Wednesday, potentially leaving more room for manoeuvre for a future premier.

Parliament may now have run out of options to block a no-deal Brexit by the next PM, admitted Oliver Letwin, one of the plan’s architects.

“I have really struggled very hard to think of every available opportunity and I can’t currently think of any more,” the Conservative MP told BBC radio on Thursday.

Johnson said that if parliament blocks Brexit completely, “we will reap the whirlwind and we will face mortal retribution from the electorate”.

– Drugs and backbiting –

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt is considered Johnson’s closest challenger.

Bookmakers have ex-foreign secretary Boris Johnson as their odds-on favourite to win the contest

Bookmakers have ex-foreign secretary Boris Johnson as their odds-on favourite to win the contest
Tolga AKMEN, AFP

Interior minister Sajid Javid, Environment Secretary Michael Gove and former Brexit secretary Dominic Raab also have enough publicly-declared backers to make it through to the second round.

The contest so far has been dominated by revelations of past drug-taking by candidates and bickering over the best way to resolve the Brexit impasse.

But Thursday’s voting will reveal each candidate’s current level of support.

The ballot takes place in a Houses of Parliament committee room between 10:00am (0900 GMT) and 12:00pm (1100 GMT), with the results expected to be announced around an hour later.

Former pensions secretary Esther McVey and ex-immigration minister Mark Harper are considered the most vulnerable.

McVey is pursuing a no-deal Brexit, arguing that the agreement struck by May keeps Britain too closely tied to the EU. Harper says an extension would be needed beyond the October 31 deadline to secure a deal.

A former investment banker and the son of a Pakistani immigrant bus driver  Sajid Javid  wants to be...

A former investment banker and the son of a Pakistani immigrant bus driver, Sajid Javid, wants to be the face of a modern, multicultural and meritocratic Britain
Tolga AKMEN, AFP

Health Secretary Matt Hancock, who is against no-deal, may have enough votes to scrape through.

“We’ve got to deliver Brexit; but then we’ve got to win a majority by appealing to aspirational people in the centre ground of British politics, where there’s a gaping hole,” he told The Guardian newspaper.

– TV test –

Former House of Commons leader Andrea Leadsom, a managed no-deal supporter, told ITV television she was “very optimistic” of having enough votes to get through.

Meanwhile International Development Secretary Rory Stewart, the contender most vehemently against leaving the EU without a deal, told The Sun newspaper he feared he was still “one or two votes short”.

The survivors face their first live television debate on Sunday in a 90-minute programme on Channel 4.

They have another round of hustings before Conservative MPs on Monday before Tuesday’s second ballot, when the bar rises from 16 backers to 32, again with the contender with the fewest votes dropping out.

May  who remains prime minister  stepped down as party leader on Friday  having failed to deliver he...

May, who remains prime minister, stepped down as party leader on Friday, having failed to deliver her plan for taking Britain out of the European Union
FABRICE COFFRINI, AFP

After further rounds of voting next week, the party hopes to be down to the last two by the end of June 20.

After weeks of hustings around the country, the 160,000 grass-roots Conservative party members pick the winner, with the result announced in the week beginning July 22.

May will then step down as prime minister and the new leader of the largest party in parliament will be appointed as PM by Queen Elizabeth II.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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