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Rishi Sunak leads PM race as Boris Johnson flies back to London Rishi Sunak leads PM race as Boris Johnson flies back to London
(32 minutes later)
Rishi Sunak has pulled ahead in the race to become the next Conservative leader and prime minister. Rishi Sunak is close to reaching the 100 MP nominations needed to enter the race to be the next Conservative leader and prime minister.
The ex-chancellor has 92 endorsements from Tory MPs so far, eight short of the 100 needed, a BBC tally showed. The ex-chancellor has 93 endorsements from Tory MPs so far, though a campaign source said he had already reached 100.
Meanwhile, former leader Boris Johnson, with 44 backers, was poised to enter the contest to succeed Liz Truss as he flew back from a Caribbean holiday. Former leader Boris Johnson, second with 44 backers, is poised to enter the contest to succeed Liz Truss and is flying back from a Caribbean holiday.
Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt became the first candidate to declare, counting 21 supporters so far. Penny Mordaunt was the first to declare, counting 21 supporters so far.
Neither Mr Sunak nor Mr Johnson have officially launched their campaigns, but this has not stopped backers declaring their support.Neither Mr Sunak nor Mr Johnson have officially launched their campaigns, but this has not stopped backers declaring their support.
Late on Friday, senior Tory MP Tobias Ellwood claimed Mr Sunak had already reached the 100 nominations needed to make it onto the ballot paper. Mr Johnson was seen heading home from a holiday in the Dominican Republic on a BA flight, and is due to arrive in London on Saturday morning.
"Honoured to be the 100th Tory MP to support #Ready4Rishi," he tweeted. Sources from Mr Sunak's campaign told BBC News he had already reached the 100 nominations needed to make it onto the ballot paper.
Following Ms Truss' shock resignation on Thursday, it was announced by Tory party officials that another leadership contest would start immediately - only a couple of months after the last one concluded. Mr Sunak secured support from a number of senior colleagues, including former chancellor and health secretary Sajid Javid, Security Minister Tom Tugendhat and former health secretary Matt Hancock.
"It is abundantly clear that Rishi Sunak has what it takes to match the challenges we face - he is the right person to lead our Party and take the country forward," Mr Javid said.
Another backer, Tobias Ellwood, said he was the 100th MP to endorse Mr Sunak, saying: "Time for centrist, stable, fiscally responsible government offering credible domestic & international leadership."
Mr Johnson's supporters said the former prime minister had "momentum and support". Trade Minister Sir James Duddridge told BBC News: "He is coming home and is up for it.
"He is the only election winner we have that has a proven track record in London, on Brexit, and in gaining the mandate we have now."
'I'm up for it'
Sir James also read out what he said was a message from Mr Johnson to the PA Media news agency that appeared to confirm his bid: "I'm flying back, Dudders. We are going to do this. I'm up for it."
The former Tory party leader is said to have contacted MPs from his holiday, the i newspaper reported, promising colleagues that if elected he would "adopt a more inclusive style of governing and bring more discipline to the Downing Street operation".
Declaring her run earlier, Ms Mordaunt, the current leader of the House of Commons, said she had been "encouraged" by colleagues to run for prime minister - and pledged to "unite our country, deliver our pledges and win the next [general election]".
She later told the Daily Telegraph: "We owe it to the country to have a detailed plan of how we will deliver. It is not enough to tell people we understand their issues. Our success should be measured in whether people really feel that we can support them.
"I will harness the talents of all sides of the Conservative Party, and all the talents of the country to deliver this."
Among those to have ruled themselves out of the race are Defence Secretary Ben Wallace - who has indicated he is "leaning" towards supporting Mr Johnson - and current Chancellor Jeremy Hunt.
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Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has ruled himself out of the race, along with Mr Tugendhat and former cabinet minister Michael Gove.
Contenders have until 14:00 BST on Monday to find 100 backers. If three reach the threshold, Conservative MPs will knock out one contender in a ballot on the same day.
MPs will hold an "indicative" ballot of the final two, with the winner then decided in an online vote of party members, to finish next Friday.