Tory party considers rule change to limit number of leadership candidates

Tory party considers rule change to limit number of leadership candidates as former chief whip becomes TWELFTH person to throw his hat into the ring

  • 1922 committee executive chairman Nigel Evans criticised some candidates
  • Said they entered race with little hope of victory in a bid to get a cabinet job 
  • Last night ex-chief whip Mark Harper became the twelfth name to enter race 

Nigel Evans, pictured, criticised some of the Tory leadership candidates’ motives

Tory chiefs are considering changing party rules to prevent so many candidates standing in the race to succeed Theresa May.

Senior party figures fear that as many as 20 MPs could run, creating ‘chaos’ and delaying the process to find a new leader.

The Conservative party board – its governing body – and the 1922 executive committee will meet on Tuesday to discuss raising the number of nominations candidates need in order to stand. At present, MPs only need a proposer and a seconder to join the race.

Nigel Evans, who is joint executive secretary of the 1922 Committee of backbench Tory MPs, accused some of the candidates of putting themselves forward despite having little support in the hope of securing a Cabinet job. ‘Some people have put their names forward when they have not got a credible chance of winning,’ he said. ‘We could rather absurdly hit 20 candidates by the time nominations close.

‘My view is that we should have not just a proper and seconder but a number of declared supporters for a candidate to be allowed to run. That would whittle the number down.’

Standing: Mark Harper, the former chief whip

Standing: Mark Harper, the former chief whip

He added: ‘We do not hamper ambition, but we do not allow some candidates to take the mick and abuse the rules in order that they can get a Cabinet job after. The rules are clearly not fit for purpose as they currently stand.’

Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith said the number of nominations that candidates need should rise to ’10, maybe 12′. Tory MPs will vote on the candidates in a series of knock-out rounds before they have whittled the list down to a final two, who party members will then get to choose from.

Last night, Mark Harper, a former chief whip, became the 12th Tory MP to enter the leadership race. He admitted he is an ‘underdog’ but said he is the only candidate not tainted by serving in Mrs May’s government.

Eleven others MPs had previously declared that they are running: Cabinet ministers Jeremy Hunt, Sajid Javid, Rory Stewart, Matt Hancock and Michael Gove; junior ministers Kit Malthouse and James Cleverly; and former Cabinet ministers Andrea Leadsom, Esther McVey, Dominic Raab and Boris Johnson.

Former international development secretary Priti Patel is expected to become number 13. 

 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk