One more Tory hopeful to be eliminated in the race for No 10

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One More Tory Hopeful To Be Eliminated In The Race For No 10
Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss in the second TV debate, © PA Media
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By Gavin Cordon, PA Whitehall Editor

Contenders for the Tory leadership will be whittled down to just four on Monday as MPs cast their votes in the third round of the contest to find a successor to Boris Johnson.

The remaining candidates were involved in series of bad-tempered exchanges in the latest TV debate – staged by ITV – on Sunday evening as the battle for a place in the run off ballot of party members became ever more bitter.

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Former UK chancellor Rishi Sunak, who topped both the first two ballots clashed with international trade minister Penny Mordaunt and foreign secretary Liz Truss over the economy.

Penny Mordaunt in the second TV debate
Penny Mordaunt in the second TV debate (Jonathan Hordle/ITV/PA)

And former equalities minister Kemi Badenoch and Tom Tugendhat – who finished fourth and fifth respectively in the last ballot and are battling to avoid elimination – squared off over who had the record and experience to be prime minister.

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Ms Truss will be hoping to pick up votes from Attorney General Suella Braverman who endorsed her candidacy after she was eliminated in the last round.

Despite having voted Remain in the 2016 referendum, the foreign secretary is backed by many Brexiteers while Ms Braverman is a longstanding supporter of leaving the EU.

Unless a significant slice of the 27 MPs who voted for Ms Braverman last time now switch to her, Ms Truss’s hopes of overhauling Ms Mordaunt in second place may be slim.

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(From left to right) Liz Truss, Kemi Badenoch, Rishi Sunak and Tom Tugendhat
(From left to right) Liz Truss, Kemi Badenoch, Rishi Sunak and Tom Tugendhat (Jonathan Hordle/ITV/PA)

The foreign secretary certainly opened the debate in a combative mood attacking Mr Sunak for putting up taxes to their highest level in 70 years, choking off economic recovery in the process.

The former chancellor hit back accusing her of peddling “something-for-nothing economics”, adding that “isn’t Conservative. It’s socialism”.

He later asked her pointedly which she regretted most – having been a Remainer or a Lib Dem.

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Mr Sunak also tangled with Ms Mordaunt, saying her plan to relax the fiscal rules and “put day-to-day bills on the country’s credit card” was “not just wrong, it is dangerous”.

“Even Jeremy Corbyn didn’t go that far,” he added.

Candidates and present Julie Etchingham on stage in the ITV televised debate gonservative leadership bidCandi
Candidates and presenter Julie Etchingham on stage in the ITV televised debate (Jonathan Hordle/ITV/PA)

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There was more bad blood also between Ms Mordaunt and Ms Badenoch over the trade minister’s views on identity politics and trans issues.

In the first debate, Ms Badenoch accused her of having pushed a policy of self-identification for trans people seeking to legally change their gender – something Mr Mordaunt strongly denied.

After more claims in the press over the weekend, Ms Mordaunt said: “I know why this is being done but I would say all attempts to paint me as an out of touch individual will fail.”

Ms Badenoch repeatedly tried to interrupt, saying: “Penny, I was just telling the truth. I am telling the truth.”

Despite only having finished fourth in the last ballot, there are signs Ms Badenoch is picking up support among Tory activists and her supporters hope it will persuade more MPs to vote for her, giving her a chance of making it into the final two.

Liz Truss taking part in the Conservative leadership debate on ITV
Liz Truss will be hoping to pick up votes from Attorney General Suella Braverman who endorsed her candidacy after she was eliminated (Jonathan Hordle/ITV/PA)

Ms Badenoch hit back at Mr Tugendhat – the only candidate who has not been a minister – when he suggested that those who had served under Mr Johnson had lent “credibility to chaos” and would find it harder to overcome Labour in a general election.

Ms Badenoch said she was “not ashamed of anything we did” in government, and that serving as a minister requires difficult decisions.

“Tom has never done that. It’s very easy for him to criticise what we’ve been doing, but we have been out there on the front line making the case,” she said.

Mr Tugendhat retorted that, as a former army officer, he had been on the front line in Afghanistan and Iraq and had led “in the argument against Putin and China”.

For all the spats, there was one striking moment of unity. When presenter Julie Etchingham asked them to put their hands up if they would be prepared to give a seat in their cabinet to Mr Johnson, not one did so.

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