The Rivals Queuing Up to Replace Theresa May

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Theresa May has agreed to put a date on the end of her premiership, effectively firing the starting gun for a leadership race that could redefine Britain’s exit from the European Union.

Here’s a look at some of the possible candidates in what’s shaping up to be a bitter and dramatic contest.

Most popular

Boris Johnson

◀ Softest Brexit

Hardest Brexit ▶

Sajid Javid

Amber Rudd

Jeremy Hunt

Michael Gove

Andrea Leadsom

Dominic Raab

Nicky Morgan

Jeremy Wright

Liam Fox

Gavin Williamson

Matt Hancock

Penny Mordaunt

David Lidington

Least popular

Most popular

◀ Softest Brexit

Hardest Brexit ▶

Boris Johnson

Sajid Javid

Amber Rudd

Jeremy Hunt

Liam Fox

Michael Gove

Gavin Williamson

Andrea

Leadsom

Karen Bradley

Esther

McVey

Jeremy Wright

Dominic Raab

Matt Hancock

Nicky Morgan

Liz Truss

Penny Mordaunt

David Lidington

Greg Clark

Damian Hinds

Least popular

Most popular

◀ Softest Brexit

Hardest Brexit ▶

Boris Johnson

Former foreign

secretary

Jacob

Rees−Mogg

Sajid Javid

Home

secretary

Liam Fox

International

trade

secretary

Amber Rudd

WORK AND

PENSIONS

secretary

Jeremy Hunt

Foreign

secretary

Priti

Patel

Michael Gove

Environment

secretary

Gavin Williamson

Former Defence secretary

Andrea Leadsom

Leader of

the Commons

Karen Bradley

Esther McVey

Dominic Raab

Former Brexit

secretary

Liz Truss

Chief secretary

to the Treasury

Matt Hancock

Health secretary

Nicky Morgan

Jeremy Wright

Rory Stewart

Penny Mordaunt

DEFENCE

SECRETARY

Greg Clark

Damian Hinds

David Lidington

Least popular

Most popular

Boris Johnson

Former foreign

secretary

◀ Softest Brexit

Hardest Brexit ▶

Jacob Rees−Mogg

Tory lawmaker

Sajid Javid

Home secretary

Priti Patel

Former international

development secretary

Amber Rudd

WORK AND PENSIONS

secretary

Liam Fox

International

trade secretary

Jeremy Hunt

Foreign secretary

Michael Gove

Environment secretary

Gavin Williamson

FORMER DEFENCE SECRETARY

Andrea Leadsom

Leader of the

Commons

Karen Bradley

NI secretary

Johnny Mercer

Tory lawmaker

Nicky Morgan

Former cabinet minister

Jeremy Wright

Culture

secretary

Dominic Raab

Former Brexit secretary

Esther McVey

Former work and

pensions secretary

Rory Stewart

INTernationaL

DEVELOPMENT SECRETARY

Matt Hancock

Health

secretary

Penny Mordaunt

DEFENCE SECRETARY

Liz Truss

Chief secretary

to the Treasury

Greg Clark

Business secretary

Damian Hinds

Education secretary

David Lidington

Cabinet minister

Least popular

Sources: Brexit stance by analysis of public statements. Relative popularity by YouGov Ratings collected through 6,786 interviews between May 2018 and April 2019.

Boris Johnson–The Favorite

Boris Johnson, or “Boris” as he’s known to just about everyone in politics, as a child wanted to be “World King.” On Thursday he confirmed he would run to be British prime minister. The 54-year-old quit Cabinet in protest at May’s Brexit compromise plan last year, and has been railing against her “surrender” ever since in well remunerated columns for the Daily Telegraph.

His role in the Brexit referendum of 2016 was decisive and he’s popular among grassroots activists. He’s also built up the biggest war chest.

But Johnson, who was famous for comedy appearances on TV before he became mayor of London, was a foreign secretary prone to gaffes—some of them serious. And his inconsistency enrages critics: The day after he invoked the spirit of Moses to demand May deliver freedom from the EU, he capitulated and indicated he would back her deal—as long as she resigned.

Johnson is loathed in Europe, where he’s famous for shaping British cynicism toward the EU during the 1990s through his work as a reporter in Brussels. He wrote stories that he cheerfully admits stretched credibility.

Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Dominic Raab–The Mercurial Brexiteer

Dominic Raab, 45, had a low public profile before succeeding David Davis as Brexit secretary in July 2018. Following a return to the backbenches having rejected May’s draft deal, Raab has concentrated on selling his backstory and setting out his vision for the country focused on boosting opportunity.

His determination is a key trait: A karate black belt, he trained and fought so hard he had to have a hip replaced in his mid-thirties. He’s also picked fights in Parliament, and is the kind of clever lawyer who doesn’t mind telling people they’re wrong.

But he’s also been a conciliator, and is probably the only member of Parliament to have both lived on an Israeli kibbutz and studied at Ramallah University. He’s worked for Dominic Grieve, now the leading Tory pro-European, and arch-Brexiteer David Davis. The son of a Jewish Czech refugee and married to a Brazilian Catholic, he defies easy categorization: sometimes blunt, sometimes charming.

Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

Penny Mordaunt–The Brexiteer with the Barrack-Room Jokes

Penny Mordaunt is known for being a good sport after appearing on television diving competition “Splash!”—donning a swimsuit to earn money for charity in her district. A Royal Navy reservist and daughter of a paratrooper, Mordaunt was the first woman to serve as armed forces minister and entered the Cabinet as international development secretary last year. She was promoted to Defence Secretary in May.

A former magician’s assistant, Mordaunt, 46, made headlines in 2014 when she used a parliamentary speech on poultry welfare laced with innuendo to settle a bet with some Navy comrades. She also drew laughter from lawmakers of all parties when she highlighted the inadequacy of women’s training in the military. “I felt that the lecture and practical demonstration on how to care for the penis and testicles in the field failed to appreciate that some of us attending had been issued with the incorrect kit,” she said.

Mordaunt has marked euroskepticism in her favor, and her insistence that British foreign aid spending should be accountable to U.K. officials rather than international charities is popular among grassroots Tories. But her feminist credentials were undermined by her refusal, as equalities minister, to answer questions about transgender issues on the popular parenting website, Mumsnet.

Photographer: Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Michael Gove–Back From the Dead

In 2016 Michael Gove, 51, was the backstabbing traitor in newspaper cartoons after he withdrew his support from long-time friend Boris Johnson to seek the Tory leadership himself.

After a stint on the backbenches, he was rehabilitated as an unexpectedly cuddly environment secretary, banning puppy-farming and pursuing a war on plastics. Considered to be more of a vision than details man, it’s been argued he’s too bad with numbers ever to be Chancellor of the Exchequer.

Gove’s a long-time Brexiteer, unlike other more recent converts, which will satisfy the Tory grassroots. His public loyalty to May, and a House of Commons speech ridiculing Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, have put him in poll position as a unity candidate among Tories, though he’s a divisive figure nationwide.

Photographer: Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Jeremy Hunt–Steady as He Goes

Jeremy Hunt was the longest-serving health secretary in the history of the state-run National Health Service, despite an attempt by May to demote him. His tenure saw the first industrial action by junior doctors in 40 years, but he also convinced the premier to put 20 billion pounds ($26 billion) of extra funding into the institution—a gamble designed to prevent Labour securing easy votes over what many Britons consider a national treasure.

Now foreign secretary, the herbal tea-drinking top diplomat is a polite multimillionaire and a marked contrast to his gaffe-prone predecessor Johnson. Even so, ardent Tory Brexiteers may need more convincing of his euroskeptic credentials as Hunt, 52, campaigned to stay in the EU before announcing he’d changed his mind. He could emerge as the only candidate able to stop Johnson—if his supporters don’t switch to his younger rival, Health Secretary Matt Hancock.

Photographer: Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Sajid Javid–The Great Backstory

Son of a Pakistani immigrant bus driver, Sajid Javid is the first ethnic minority home secretary in the law-and-order post’s history. A Muslim who is pro-Israel and socially liberal, Javid, 49, has been vocal on antisemitism, and also publicly condemned as “sick Asian pedophiles” the convicted members of a child sexual abuse gang who were mainly of Pakistani origin.

He’s also distanced himself from a previous home secretary—his boss, Theresa May—particularly taking a less hardline approach to immigration. Fiscally tough and intellectually euroskeptic, Javid’s positions are popular among rank-and-file Tories. A reluctant Remainer in the 2016 referendum campaign—partly out of loyalty and partly over economic fears—he has since moved firmly in the pro-Brexit camp, opposing a customs union with the EU.

Photographer: Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Andrea Leadsom–The One Who Tried Before

Andrea Leadsom, 56, stood for the Tory leadership when former premier David Cameron resigned after the 2016 referendum, reaching the run-off against May. But she had to pull out after she suggested having children made her a better candidate than her rival. In media interviews, May had talked about her desire for children but said she and husband were unable to conceive.

May gave Leadsom a Cabinet position as environment secretary. She was shifted to Leader of the House of Commons in 2017. Though a prominent euroskeptic, Leadsom—who worked in financial services before entering Parliament—backed May’s blueprint for leaving the EU, and has been supportive of May. She’s gained fans among MP colleagues for her spats with House of Commons Speaker John Bercow, who many Tories accuse of anti-Brexit bias.

Photographer: Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images

Gavin Williamson—The One With Much to Prove

The former defence secretary’s fall from grace was almost as steep as his rise. The 42-year old made powerful political enemies by lobbying through the media for more defense spending, and privately briefing against colleagues. That came to a head in May, when he was fired by the prime minister for leaking secret discussions about Huawei’s role in Britain—an accusation he strongly denied.

His erratic performances didn’t endear him to the military, and he even managed to cause a diplomatic spat with China, when he threatened to deploy a warship to Asia on its maiden voyage, saying it would be a show of strength against China’s territorial aspirations in the region. One of his famous gaffes was when he said that Russia should “go away” and “shut up.”

Williamson favors Churchillian poses in photos surrounded by troops, or alongside dogs, cats and hedgehogs. When he was chief whip in charge of lawmaker discipline, his pet tarantula Cronus—named after a Greek god who castrated and deposed his father and then ate his children to make sure they didn’t oust him—once sat in a glass tank on his desk.

Photographer: Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Liz Truss—The Twitter-Loving Neo-Thatcherite

After growing up in a left-wing household in the northern county of Yorkshire, as a youngster Truss rebelled and joined the Tories. In the Thatcherite tradition, pro-Brexit Truss advocates de-regulation and hard work, and was co-author of a 2012 book claiming British workers are among the world’s most idle.

As justice secretary in 2016, Truss, 43, came under fire for failing to defend the independence of the judiciary after a tabloid newspaper dubbed high court judges the “Enemies of the People” for ruling Parliament should be consulted before triggering the Brexit process.

She is also known for some bizarre political interventions, and for innuendo-laden jokes about sausages. A 2014 speech to the Tory annual conference went viral after she hyperbolically declared: “We import two thirds of our cheese. That. Is. A. Disgrace.” Currently chief secretary to the Treasury, she’s skilled on Twitter, illustrating a higher employment rate using children’s book character Winnie-the-Pooh.

Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

Matt Hancock—The Energetic Up-and-Comer

Having enjoyed a meteoric rise to become health secretary, 40-year-old Matt Hancock will be urging colleagues—as in the Queen rock hit he sings at karaoke—“Don’t stop me now.”

But Hancock’s centrist politics mean he’ll need to prove his pro-Brexit stance to colleagues and grassroots Tories. In an interview in April he said he still disagreed with the referendum result but would respect it because it’s what the country voted for.

As a champion of new technology, Hancock was ridiculed for becoming the first MP to have his own personal app, but he shrugged it off, in-keeping with his well-established confidence in his own ability. On becoming a junior minister in 2012 at the age of 33, he defended his youth by comparing himself to former premiers Winston Churchill and William Pitt.

The hyperactive Hancock is the only modern-day lawmaker to have both won a horse race as a jockey and played cricket in the Arctic, and his Instagram account shows him running, playing with his dog, Hercules, and shaking hands with foreign dignitaries including French President Emmanuel Macron.

Photographer: Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Amber Rudd–The King Maker

Amber Rudd, 55, returned to the Cabinet as work and pensions secretary in November, just over six months after being forced to quit as home secretary for misleading MPs over immigration targets—a charge for which she was largely absolved.

One of the most high-profile pro-EU members of Cabinet, Rudd has threatened to quit if leaving the bloc without a deal becomes policy. Her anti-Brexit stance makes her an unlikely winner—Rudd has spoken wistfully about a modernizer becoming Tory leader again—but she could become king maker by persuading supporters to back another candidate.

Even so, Rudd has a wafer-thin majority of 346 in Hastings, southeast England, and was forced to deny she’d hired the Tory campaign guru Lynton Crosby to help her defend it.

Photographer: Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg