Irish Independent

Who could replace Theresa May?

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THERESA May’s leadership is under threat following the resignatio­ns of Boris Johnson and David Davis. These are the runners and riders to succeed her.

BORIS JOHNSON

Boris Johnson’s spectacula­r resignatio­n has already led to fevered speculatio­n about a future leadership bid.

He has been repeatedly written off by his critics but remains hugely popular with Euroscepti­c Tory MPs, having championed their cause relentless­ly in cabinet – often in the face of caustic opprobrium from his colleagues.

The EU referendum polarised public opinion about Mr Johnson, but his shock resignatio­n will only increase his high profile and his hard line on Brexit could win him significan­t support.

SAJID JAVID

The UK home secretary has won plaudits with both Remainers and Brexiteers for repeatedly taking on the prime minister – and winning. Tory Euroscepti­cs once said they could never forgive him after he decided at the last minute to back Remain after flirting with Brexit.

However, since his appointmen­t as home secretary they have been delighted with the way he has embraced Brexit, in particular his decision to side with Mr Johnson and Mr Davis in rejecting Mrs May’s customs partnershi­p.

MICHAEL GOVE

The environmen­t secretary has played his cards very, very carefully in recent weeks.

While privately he has raised significan­t concerns about Mrs May’s Brexit policy, and even ripped up a page of her customs partnershi­p plan during one meeting, publicly he has been far more reticent. While he said the Chequers compromise was not what he had hoped for, he added that he was a “realist”.

His comments are in stark contrast to those of Mr Johnson, who described the Brexit plan at Chequers as a “turd”.

However, he has been actively courting fellow MPs and speaking at innumerabl­e think-tank events.

JEREMY HUNT

Having fended off a bid by Mrs May to move him on as health secretary, Mr Hunt has establishe­d himself as a firm Euroscepti­c despite having backed Remain during the EU referendum.

He is seen by some as a compromise candidate, and is said to have taken to inviting colleagues in groups of eight or 10 for meetings with sandwiches in Portcullis House.

GAVIN WILLIAMSON

The defence secretary has been locked in an extraordin­ary row with the prime minister over defence funding, and has been accused of telling officials that he could bring her down.

“I made her and I can break her,” he is alleged to have said – although aides deny he used that form of words.

The former chief whip is said to visit the tearooms every morning, where he has been seen meeting with Euroscepti­cs MPs.

JACOB REES-MOGG

Among Tory Euroscepti­cs, Jacob Rees-Mogg is a man who can do no wrong. As leader of the European Research Group of Euroscepti­c Tory MPs, he has been merciless in his criticism of Mrs May over Brexit.

He has to date stopped short of directly calling for the prime minister’s head, although he has come remarkably close. Mr ReesMogg has always eschewed any leadership ambitions and insisted his focus is on keeping Mrs May to her promises on Brexit.

And as much as he is loved by Euroscepti­cs, he was recently branded “insolent” by one Tory minister. But there are some who believe he could go all the way.

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