Tory members measure up leadership finalists
After weeks of voting by Tory MPs, Kemi Badenoch and Robert Jenrick are through to the final round of the Conservative Party leadership contest â and fleeting frontrunner James Cleverly is out.
Now the future of the party rests with its members, who will vote for the candidate they believe can restore Tory fortunes after their drubbing in this yearâs general election.
Reacting to Wednesdayâs result, members who spoke to the BBC were either unsure or tentative about who to back.
Theyâve got the best part of a month to make up their minds before voting closes and the winner is declared on 2 November.
Sarah Whalley-Hoggins is one of an estimated 140,000 Conservative members who will have a say in the ballot.
The Conservative opposition leader on Stratford-on-Avon District Council, sheâs leaning towards Jenrick.
She said his resignation as immigration minister over the Rwanda scheme last year âshows a man of principleâ.
But she added that the party needed to make sweeping changes â including reforming its selection processes â before it can seriously challenge to win general elections again.
âIâm not choosing the candidate for the next prime minister,â she said. âIâm choosing the candidate thatâs going to sort out this once-great party of ours.
âThat to me is very important, or weâre never going to win another general election.â
âJust wonât workâ
Ed Costelloe, chairman of Grassroots Conservatives, said he was surprised James Cleverly did not make it to the vote of members.
Polling suggests Bachnoch is the favourite to take the crown, he said, but added: âWhen you listen to ordinary members who have never been polled, thereâs more open-mindedness.â
Mr Costelloe said he was personally leaning towards Badenoch.
âKemi Badenoch is the sort of person who can stand up and in a sense, become more presidential. I suspect that she will win.
âShe will make a few failings of course. But also I suspect she will mould herself on Maggie Thatcher, say sheâs going to get things done, and people will probably believe her.â
James Hawkes, a member of the Young Conservatives from Hull, said housing will be a big issue for him and others his age.
âWe need a candidate whoâs willing to build more houses,â he said.
He lamented Cleverlyâs exit, which âmight not be the bestâ for the party.
Badenoch, Mr Hawkes said, âappeals too much to the Reform-ist rightwing and it just wonât workâ.
Mr Hawkes said Jenrick has the right balance, adding he can appeal âmore to the right and left of the party on a range of issuesâ.
John Strafford, veteran campaigner for greater grassroots democracy in the party, said the system currently used for choosing leaders is an âabsolute disasterâ.
He argues that the final four should have been put to a vote of the membership after they had delivered their speeches at last weekâs party conference, rather than being whittled down to two by the MPs.
Under the current system, which was brought in by former leader William Hague, the best candidate does not necessarily win, argues Mr Strafford, who chairs the Conservative Democratic Organisation.
âThe whole thing is manipulated. Bribery takes place. The MPs will only vote on the basis of âwhatâs in it for me?â They are looking for jobs, titles and honours. Itâs a terrible way in which to do things.â
He is campaigning for leadership contests to be taken out of the hands of the 1922 committee of backbenchers, which he says keep changing the rules, and put into a new party constitution.
âCommon sense policiesâ
Richard Lewington, who chairs the Madrid branch of Conservatives Abroad, shared Mr Straffordâs unhappiness with the MPs getting to choose the final two, saying: âIt should be a membership-led selection process.â
He had been part of Tom Tugendhatâs leadership campaign, he said, and has not decided who to vote for, adding that other members of his organisation were âsplitâ and still wondering about who to back.
But he said Kemi Badenoch and Robert Jenrick were both âexcellent choicesâ who would help the party win back support from Reform UK.
âThey are very similar in their philosophies, very much to the right of the party,â he told the BBC.
âThis is where the party needs to go,â he added, arguing that it was ânot right enoughâ at this yearâs general election, and needed to get back to âcommon sense policiesâ and âsmall governmentâ.
Reflecting on the surprise rejection of James Cleverly, who he described as a âcontinuityâ candidate, he said: âIt seems that the Parliamentary Conservative Party want to break away from the norm.â