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    Boris Johnson news – live: Tory leadership hopefuls branded ‘chaotic catwalk’

    Who could replace Boris Johnson in the role of prime minister?
    The shadow home secretary has called the Tory leadership race a “chaotic catwalk of contestants” as a growing number of MPs battle it out to replace Boris Johnson. Yvette Cooper said they were all part of a “catalogue of failure” as she blasted 12 years of Conservative government. It comes as the Tory leadership battle heats up, with Penny Mordaunt becoming the latest candidate to throw her hat into the ring on Sunday. She joins eight other MPs who have put their names forward so far, including Sajid Javid, Jeremy Hunt, Nadhim Zahawi and Rishi Sunak. Grant Shapps, the transport secretary, and Tom Tugendhat, the foreign affairs committee chair, are also running.Liz Truss, the foreign secretary, is also widely expected to launch a leadership bid shortly, with MPs already signalling their support.Brexit, tax cuts and transgender rights are among the issues the hopefuls have been setting out their positions on. RecommendedShow latest update

    1657464971Zoe Tidman10 July 2022 15:561657464018Mordaunt posts new video after Paralympian complainsPenny Mordaunt has now tweeted out her campaign video without the Paralympics clip:Zoe Tidman10 July 2022 15:401657461970Rishi Sunak ‘dirty dossier’?The Conservative Party leadership race to succeed Boris Johnson has descended into acrimony, as MPs opposed to Rishi Sunak circulated a so-called “dirty dossier” designed to stop support building for his campaign.The memo circulated on Tory WhatsApp group reportedly attacks the former chancellor personally, Adam Forrest reports: More

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    Hunt and Tugendhat vow to keep Boris Johnson’s protocol bill and uphold Brexit ‘revolution’

    Conservative Party candidates Jeremy Hunt and Tom Tugendhat have vowed to press ahead with Boris Johnson’s controversial legislation to unilaterally ditch Brexit checks in defiance of the EU.The Remain-backing moderates have both promised to press ahead with the Northern Ireland Protocol bill, despite warnings it will break international law.Mr Hunt suggested to regretted backing the Remain campaign – saying he would be “very tempted” to vote Leave – and vowed to make Brexiteer Esther McVey the job of deputy prime minister if he wins the contest.Mr Tugendhat described Brexit as a “revolution” which could not be overturned. “There is no way back into the European Union. I would never vote to go back into the European Union. That’s over,”The Remain campaigner also said the protocol bill was a good “negotiating leverage” to push the EU further on easing checks. “You have to keep the bill. You need to have the negotiating leverage,” he told the Sunday Times.Mr Tugendhat also claimed he could both “reset” relations with Brussels and end the barriers between Northern Ireland and Great Britain. “There are two things that are going to change that dynamic. The first is the bill. The second is a change of leader.”RecommendedThe foreign affairs select committe chair added: “I can deliver what we are asking for, Northern Ireland fully and completely part of the UK single market, without the risk to the Europeans that they currently claim.”Mr Hunt told the Sunday Telegraph he would push the protocol bill through parliament if he wins, despite the EU’s warning the plan to rip up the Brexit withdrawal agreement would break international law and could spark trade retaliation.The former minister, making his second bid at the leadership, also said “Brexit freedoms” must be embraced in an effort to make Britain a “powerhouse” economy.Asked if he would now he vote to leave the EU if he could go back to the 2016 referendum, he said: “I would be very tempted to.”Asked onn BBC Sunday Morning if he “blows with the wind” on Brexit, Mr Hunt said: “I have never doubted for one moment that we can make a hug success of being outside the European Union.”Brexit opportunities minister Jacob Rees-Mogg said it was “very important” that the next leader could deliver on Brexit and press on with the protocol bill. “It’s needs to be someone who will support that.”Sajid Javid, who entered the race on Saturday, said the UK should consider ripping up old EU laws “to make us a more pro-business, wealth-creating, entrepreneurial economy”.The candidates have distance themselves from senior Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood’s call for a return to the EU single market to help ease the cost of living crisis.Mr Tugendhat said the naughtiest thing he had ever done is “invade a country” – referring to his time in the military during the invasion of Iraq. RecommendedMeanwhile, Tory leadership campaign teams are reportedly drawing up dossiers full of compromising allegations against rival candidates and their aides.At least two rival campaign teams are claimed to have handed Labour digital dossiers packed with allegations against potential opponents, according to the Sunday Times – with even candidates’ staffers supposedly targeted.Labour MP Chris Bryant tweeted: “The stories circulating about the various leadership candidates are so lurid they’re difficult to credit, but even more bizarre is the fact Tory MPs are circulating them.” More

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    Jeremy Hunt wants to expand Rwanda deportation plan to other countries as Tory candidates back flights

    Conservative leadership contender Jeremy Hunt said he would back an expansion of the government’s policy of sending asylum seekers on one-way flights to Rwanda.His Tory rivals Sajid Javid and Tom Tugendhat also vowed to push on with the plan to use the central African country to “offshore” migrants arriving by small boats.Viewed as a Tory moderate, Mr Hunt is keen to build support from people in the right of the party keen to see further crackdowns on small boat crossing in the English Channel.“I think we have to stop the small boats. I support the current policy,” the former cabinet minister told BBC’s Sunday Morning programme.But he also went a step further than those who have made their support of home secretary Priti Patel’s scheme by stating he would be keen to expand the scheme to other countries.“I hope we could find some other countries as well as Rwanda,” Mr Hunt told the Sunday Telegraph.Recommended“If we want to be a humane country that offers a safe haven for people who genuinely need asylum, then we need to find legal, safe routes for people to come here – not a mad dash for people to put their lives in the hands of people smugglers and try to get across the channel,” Mr Hunt added on Sky News.Mr Tugendhat – hoping to win the support of the One Nation wing of Tory moderates – also said he would keep the “Rwanda solution” policy put forward by Boris Johnson’s government.“The Rwanda solution is not one anyone would have initially chosen, but the reality is you cannot have rewards for criminality and illegal action,” he told the Sunday Times.Mr Javid also backed the Rwanda plan on the BBC. “I agreed with that policy.”Plans for the first Rwanda flight were halted at the last-minute last week by rulings from the European Court of Human Rights and the UK’s Appeal Court.Further attempts to fly migrants out are not likely to be made until after a judicial review begins next week, though No 10 has not ruled it out, despite Mr Johnson’s status as caretaker PM.Mr Hunt and Mr Tugendhat have vowed to press ahead with Boris Johnson’s controversial legislation to unilaterally ditch Brexit checks in defiance of the EU.The Remain-backing candidates both promised to press ahead with the Northern Ireland Protocol bill, despite warnings it will break international law. Mr Tugendhat said it was good “negotiating leverage” to push the EU further on easing checks.All the candidates to have entered the race in the past 24 hours have vowed to cut taxes. Mr Hunt and Mr Javid both suggested they would block another Scottish independence referendum for at least a decade.Mr Tugendhat said the naughtiest thing he had ever done is “invade a country” – referring to his time in the military during the invasion of Iraq.RecommendedMeanwhile, Tory leadership campaign teams are reportedly drawing up dossiers full of compromising allegations against rival candidates and their aides.At least two rival campaign teams are claimed to have handed Labour digital dossiers packed with allegations against potential opponents, according to the Sunday Times – with even candidates’ staffers supposedly targeted.Labour MP Chris Bryant tweeted: “The stories circulating about the various leadership candidates are so lurid they’re difficult to credit, but even more bizarre is the fact Tory MPs are circulating them.” More

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    Knives out as Tory leadership teams ‘create dirty dossiers on rivals’

    Tory leadership campaign teams are reportedly drawing up dossiers full of compromising allegations against rival candidates and their aides.With Boris Johnson forced from office by a seemingly endless saga of incidents casting doubt over his personal integrity, one senior Tory MP has warned “scandal now has a currency in the forthcoming leadership elections”.As a result, at least two rival campaign teams are claimed to have handed the Labour Party digital dossiers packed with allegations against their potential opponents, according to the Sunday Times – with even candidates’ staffers supposedly targeted.RecommendedThe dossiers are claimed to include allegations about extramarital affairs and the use of tax dodges, illicit drugs and prostitutes, with at least one private investigator reportedly hired to probe some candidates’ financial arrangements.“There are rumours being widely circulated about candidates getting involved in bondage, domination and sadomasochism, claims of inappropriate relationships and compromising explicit photographs that could be used as kompromat,” a senior Tory Party source told the paper.“It has even been claimed that one of the contenders requests that staff deliver their government papers to them while they are in the bath.” More

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    Boris Johnson ‘lobbied for City Hall job for young woman while they were in a relationship’

    Boris Johnson reportedly tried to get a young woman a job at City Hall while they were having a sexual relationship. The woman has claimed that Mr Johnson abused his power when he was London mayor to have a relationship with her.The prime minister allegedly secured an interview for the young Tory activist in 2008 just weeks after meeting her and bringing her back to his parliamentary office, The Sunday Times has reported.RecommendedHowever, Cabinet Office minister Kit Malthouse turned her down for the role because he felt that she and Mr Johnson had become too close, the paper said.It is said the woman wanted a meeting with Mr Johnson nine years later at the height of the #MeToo movement. She reportedly told him in the meeting that she felt uncomfortable about the relationship they had. More

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    Grant Shapps unveils bid to become Conservative leader with swipe at ‘plotting’ rivals

    Transport secretary Grant Shapps has launched his Conservative Party leadership bid with a swipe at his political rivals over their disloyalty to Boris Johnson. Mr Shapps said his main aim was to rebuild the economy so it was the biggest in Europe by 2050 and tackle the country’s cost of living crisis. He ruled out a general election and said he would produce an emergency budget, instructing his chancellor to cut personal tax for the most vulnerable and giving state support to firms with high levels of energy consumption, as reported by The Sunday Times.The 53-year-old, who is the MP for Welwyn Hatfield, also fired a broadside at his leadership rivals and suggested he has always been loyal to Boris Johnson.He said: “I have not spent the last few turbulent years plotting or briefing against the prime minister. I have not been mobilising a leadership campaign behind his back. I tell you this: for all his flaws – and who is not flawed? – I like Boris Johnson. I have never, for a moment, doubted his love of this country.”RecommendedMr Shapps has been a keen supporter of the prime minister and helped him win the leadership contest in 2019, as well as publicly backing him on multiple ocassions.He added: “It is easy to criticise Boris after keeping one’s head down for years while being happy to benefit from his patronage. I am glad that I did not do that.“Even as the skies darkened over his premiership, often because of errors committed by him, I hoped he could pull it back. Because in losing him, we would lose a man who makes a unique connection with people.”Despite his support for Mr Johnson, the transport secretary signalled that if he won the leadership contest it would be a return to more traditional Tory values around lower taxation and a smaller state.He said: “I do think we have lost sight of what we should be about as a Conservative government. We should trust people and allow them to spend their money as they wish. “We must map a clear path to lower taxes, not just expressing good intentions. Covid witnessed a necessary and extraordinary expansion of state spending and a quite unprecedented level of state interference in people’s private lives. As Conservatives, we should tolerate the unnecessary continuation of neither.”His declaration comes after defence secretary Ben Wallace ruled himself out of the Conservative Party leadership contest despite his status as favourite among the Tory grassroots. Brexiteer Steve Baker also said he would not stand.RecommendedIn addition to Mr Shapps, Rishi Sunak and Suella Braverman, ex-minister Kemi Badenoch and Tom Tugendhat have launched their own bids.Foreign secretary Liz Truss, trade minister Penny Mordaunt, chancellor Nadhim Zahawi, and former health secretaries Sajid Javid and Jeremy Hunt are also expected to launch their own bids imminently. More

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    Boris Johnson ‘considering peerage for Nadine Dorries’

    Boris Johnson is thought to be considering a peerage for his most loyal cabinet minister Nadine Dorries as part of his resignation honours list.The prime minister is reportedly planning to put his culture secretary into the House of Lords as part of a tradition allowing him to recommend certain appointments before leaving No 10.According to the Sunday Times, Ms Dorries is “expected” to go to the upper chamber and depart frontline politics for novel writing after Mr Johnson’s downfall.Paul Dacre, the former editor of the Daily Mail, and billionaire Tory donor Michael Hintze are also said to be in line to be ennobled in the next couple of months.The newspaper reported that a No 10 official contacted a veteran Tory to ask whether it was possible to give Stanley Johnson a knighthood on the basis he was “once an MEP”, but the senior party figure advised against it.RecommendedAllegra Stratton – who quit as Mr Johnson’s spokeswoman after she was captured joking about at Christmas gathering at the start of the Partygate scandal – is said to be “tipped” for a peerage as part of the PM’s resignation list.The former BBC and ITV journalist briefly acted as the prime minister’s spokesperson for the Cop26 climate conference in Glasgow.Further details of Mr Johnson desperate final hours clinging onto power on Wednesday evening. Preparing to meet a delegation cabinet ministers advising him to go, Ms Dorries is said to have told the PM: “You send them packing.”Mr Johnson shared his fears Rishi Sunak had been engaged in a plot lasting months to remove him in cahoots with old ally turned bitter enemy Dominic Cummings, according to the Sunday Times.But an ally of Mr Cummings said claims that he was collaborating with the ex-chancellor were “b******s”The culture secretary – who considered her own bid to keep the flame of Mr Johnson’s premiership alive – is said to have claimed that the contest would now be a “bloodbath” and the revolt had unleashed the “hounds of hell”.RecommendedSir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, treasurer of the 1922 Committee, criticised Ms Dorries’ comments about the leadership race.He told Times Radio: “I think it’s not helpful … We do want to unite the Conservative Party behind a candidate.”The Independent has contacted No 10 for comment on plans for the resignation honours list. More

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    Nadhim Zahawi declares Tory leadership bid to replace Boris Johnson

    Newly-appointed chancellor Nadhim Zahawi has entered the race for the Tory leadership to replace Boris Johnson.He is the second Cabinet minister to declare their ambition in the space of an hour after transport Grant Shapps said he intended to stand on a platform of improving the economy and tackling the cost of living crisis.Mr Zahawi, who was brought in to replace Rishi Sunak after he resigned on Tuesday, said his focus will be on lower taxes for for individuals, families and business.He also pledged to increased defence spending and continue with education reforms that he started in his previous role.In addition to Mr Zahawi, Mr Shapps, Mr Sunak, and Suella Braverman, Kemi Badenoch and Tom Tugendhat have launched their own bids, with Liz Truss, Penny Mordaunt, Sajid Javid and Jeremy Hunt expected to launch imminent campaigns in th the coming days.RecommendedIn his bid for leader, Mr Zahawi said: “My aim is a simple one: to provide the opportunities that were afforded to my generation, to all Britons, whoever you are and wherever you come from. To steady the ship and to stabilise the economy.“Thanks to Brexit, we are now a free nation. Let’s not just talk about the opportunities that follow, let’s take them.“If a young boy, who came here aged 11 without a word of English, can serve at the highest levels of Her Majesty’s Government and run to be the next prime minister, anything is possible.”He added that he wants to “focus on letting children be children, protecting them from damaging and inappropriate nonsense being forced on them by radical activists”.Mr Zahawi was given massive plaudits for the swift roll-out of Covid-19 vaccines in the UK and was quickly promoted to education secretary by Boris Johnson.He is one of the Cabinet ministers who did not resign last week and was instead promoted to chancellor by Mr Johnson after Mr Sunak stepped down.However Mr Zahawi’s bid for the leadership comes as The Independent can exclusively reveal that his tax affairs are being investigated by HMRC.RecommendedMichelle Donelan, who resigned from the role of education secretary on Thursday – less than 36 hours after accepting it, said she was backing Nadhim Zahawi to be the next Tory leader.In a tweet, she said: “I’ve worked with Nadhim Zahawi in the Department for Education, and around the cabinet table over the last 10 months. I’m backing him to be our next prime minister because he gets things done and delivers just like he did as Vaccines Minister.” More