Tory leadership race: Rory Stewart wins support from Theresa May’s deputy David Lidington
Underdog candidate has built momentum but may struggle to meet threshold in second round of MPs’ votes
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Your support makes all the difference.Theresa May’s de facto deputy has thrown his weight behind the leadership campaign of Rory Stewart, as the underdog candidate vowed to lead efforts to stop a no-deal Brexit.
David Lidington’s endorsement of the international development secretary as Conservative leader and next PM will inevitably fuel Westminster rumours that Ms May herself is backing Mr Stewart – though she insisted she will not say who she has voted for.
In a defiant pushback at frontrunner Boris Johnson, Mr Stewart said he was ready to join “nearly 100” Conservative MPs in voting down a no-deal outcome if he is eliminated by a hard Brexiteer.
Mr Johnson was expected to take another step towards No 10 in the second round of MPs’ votes on Tuesday by consolidating the command he established last week, with 114 votes to his nearest rival Jeremy Hunt’s 43. The ex-foreign secretary has continued to pick up endorsements, including from defeated contenders Matt Hancock and Esther McVey.
Despite picking up momentum since entering the succession battle as a rank outsider and being installed as bookies’ second favourite, Mr Stewart faces a struggle to pass the threshold of 33 MPs’ votes needed to remain in the race after the second round of voting.
He was cautious about his prospects, saying only that he should get through if people who have offered him their support “do what they say”. But with just 19 backers in the first round, he is in a perilous position alongside the home secretary Sajid Javid on 23 and former Brexit secretary Dominic Raab on 27. Sources close to Mr Raab said he was “quietly confident” of meeting the challenge, despite seeing many hardline Brexiteers fall in behind Mr Johnson.
The contender finishing last will be kicked out of the race, along with any who fail to overcome the 33-vote hurdle. Survivors will take part in an hour-long live TV debate on the BBC, which Mr Johnson has agreed to attend – unlike an earlier showdown on Channel 4.
Alongside Mr Lidington, Mr Stewart has picked up support from ministers Tobias Ellwood and Margot James, former party chair Caroline Spelman and Scottish MP Paul Masterton.
Speaking at a rally for Mr Stewart, Mr Lidington – who, like Mr Ellwood and Ms James, previously backed health secretary Matt Hancock – said there was “a yearning in this country for political leaders who tell it straight to people, who are honest about the difficulties and challenges that lie ahead [and] are willing to listen, who are prepared to get out of the comfort zone and out of the Westminster bubble”.
Reports at the weekend suggested that Ms May might have given her first-round vote to the Penrith and the Border MP, who is the only candidate to promise another attempt at getting her three-time rejected Brexit deal through parliament.
But the outgoing PM insisted: “I am not backing a particular candidate. I haven’t endorsed a particular candidate.
“I did vote last Thursday. I haven’t told anybody who I voted for and I’m not going to.”
Mr Hunt issued a warning to MPs of the dangers of a Boris Johnson victory, telling a backbench hustings it could force Tories into an election that would spell “devastation” for the party, as Brussels would not do a deal with someone it did not trust.
“If we put forward the wrong person there will be no trust, no negotiation and no deal,” said the foreign secretary.
He suggested that some MPs have now resigned themselves to an early election and are offering Mr Johnson their backing as the candidate most likely to be able to salvage a result from it. But he warned: “No campaigning brilliance will head off the devastation we would face from an election before we leave the EU.”
Addressing a hustings of Westminster journalists, Mr Gove committed himself to a vote of MPs on any Brexit outcome, deal or no deal.
“I think it would be a mistake for any prime minister to say they were doing something as momentous – and potentially liberating – as leaving the EU without parliament ... having agreed that the prime minister was doing the right thing,” he said.
Mr Stewart, echoing senior Tories Philip Hammond and Ken Clarke, who could potentially back a vote of no confidence, said: “I’m not going to take down a Conservative government.”
Questioned by The Independent at hustings in Westminster, Mr Stewart said: “We can stop a no-deal Brexit much more easily than that.
“I, and nearly 100 of my colleagues, would vote to prevent a no-deal Brexit without having to bring down a Conservative government.”
Mr Stewart also ruled out supporting a Final Say referendum on Brexit, telling journalists it would be “catastrophic and divisive”.
Mr Stewart, backing the justice secretary David Gauke, seized on a warning note issued by credit rating agency DBRS, which said that the UK’s AAA rating could come under downward pressure from “a significant increase in the likelihood of a break-up of the United Kingdom such that could occur in the context of a no-deal Brexit outcome”.
Mr Gauke described the report as a “stark” warning that no deal would “threaten our precious union of nations and undermine our financial stability”.
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