Boris Johnson has announced he will resign, which means there will now be a leadership election to decide who becomes the next Conservative leader and prime minister.
They will have to secure the backing of Tory MPs, with the final two candidates going to a ballot of Conservative members. But who are the potential candidates?
Remember, most of these MPs and ministers have not yet said whether they want the job of Tory leader and PM – but they are the ones to watch. Others may also come forward.
Meet some of the possible candidates
Rishi Sunak
Former Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Once seen as a favourite to replace Boris Johnson as Conservative leader
- Reputation dented by a controversy over his wife’s tax affairs and being fined for breaching lockdown rules
- Became an MP in 2015 – for the North Yorkshire constituency of Richmond
- Was chancellor of the exchequer less than five years later in 2020
- Grappled with the coronavirus pandemic, spending huge amounts to keep the economy afloat
- One of the first to quit the cabinet with minister and friend Sajid Javid, paving the way for the stream of resignations
Liz Truss
Foreign Secretary
- Only the second woman to lead the Foreign Office, taking credit for securing the release of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe from Iran
- Has held a series of cabinet positions, including negotiating post-Brexit trade agreements as international trade secretary
- First elected in 2010 as MP for South West Norfolk and popular among Conservative Party members
- Mocked for giving a speech at the 2015 Conservative conference on UK cheese imports
- Early declaring her support for Boris Johnson after his chancellor and health secretary resigned
Sajid Javid
Former Health Secretary
- Born in Rochdale to a first generation Pakistani immigrant family
- Became MP for Bromsgrove in 2010 after a career in the City
- Made a bid for the leadership in 2019, making it to the final four before dropping out to support Boris Johnson
- His endorsement was rewarded with the role of chancellor, but he quit after six months in a row over his advisers
- Made a return to the front benches as health secretary in 2021 before resigning again, saying he had lost faith in Mr Johnson’s leadership
Nadhim Zahawi
New Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Born in Iraq, Mr Zahawi and his family were forced to flee when Saddam Hussein came to power
- After setting up a firm selling Teletubbies merchandise and founding polling company YouGov, he became MP for Stratford-on-Avon in 2010
- Cemented his reputation as vaccines minister in the pandemic, leading to a promotion to the cabinet as education secretary
- Another promotion to chancellor did not stop him from joining a group of ministers 24 hours later telling Mr Johnson to go
Jeremy Hunt
Member of Parliament
- The son of an admiral, he made his fortune by setting up Hotcourses – a website connecting prospective students with educational institutions
- Entered the Commons in 2005 as MP for South West Surrey
- Joined the government as culture secretary in 2010 and has also served as health and foreign secretary
- Came second to Boris Johnson in the 2019 leadership contest and has remained an influential backbencher
- Scrutinised government policy throughout the pandemic as chair of the Commons Health Committee
Suella Braverman
Attorney General
- Became a minister at the Department for Leaving the EU under Theresa May but resigned over Mrs May’s EU withdrawal deal
- The former barrister replaced Geoffrey Cox as attorney general in 2020 and remains in that role
- Has served as MP for Fareham in Hampshire since 2015
- Confirmed she would join a Tory leadership race, saying “it would be the greatest honour”
- Called for Boris Johnson to quit following a series of ministerial resignations
Penny Mordaunt
Minister of State
- Made history becoming the UK’s first female defence secretary in 2019
- A naval reservist, she had already served as armed forces minister under David Cameron
- She is a former magician’s assistant and head of the Conservative Party’s youth wing
- Best known outside Westminster for appearing on ITV’s celebrity diving show Splash!
- Formerly a press officer for William Hague when he was party leader and Kensington and Chelsea Council
- Became MP for Portsmouth North in 2010
Ben Wallace
Defence Secretary
- Led Boris Johnson’s unsuccessful 2017 leadership campaign, before being rewarded with a cabinet post in 2019
- Served in the Army in Germany, Cyprus, Belize and Northern Ireland where he helped thwart an IRA bomb attack
- Was also one of the main army personnel involved in recovering Princess Diana’s body from Paris
- The former soldier became an MP in 2005 – for Wyre and Preston North, formerly Lancaster and Wyre
- While in the Scots Guards, he is said to have broken the record for the largest ever bill at the bar in the officers’ mess
Tom Tugendhat
Member of Parliament
- A former Territorial Army officer who served in Iraq and Afghanistan and has been talked up for years as a potential future Conservative leader
- Chairman of the Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee since January 2020
- Became an MP in 2015 – for the constituency of Tonbridge in Kent
- A moderate who projects pragmatism rather than populism
- Told MPs of the grief and rage felt by veterans at the “abandonment” of Afghanistan in withdrawal by western forces last year
Steve Baker
Member of Parliament
- Elected as the Conservative MP for Wycombe in 2010 after 10 years as an engineering officer in the Royal Air Force
- Following the 2015 general election, he co-founded Conservatives for Britain, a group of 50 Tory MPs putting pressure on David Cameron to renegotiate UK membership of the EU
- A member of the Eurosceptic European Research Group, he later became one of the so-called “Spartan” holdouts fighting against Theresa May’s Brexit deal
- Made it known that colleagues have “implored” him to stand for the leadership
Priti Patel
Home Secretary
- Elected to the seat of Witham in Essex in 2010 after several years in PR for the Conservative Party and lobbying for tobacco and alcohol industries
- Served as Theresa May’s international development secretary, but forced to quit over unauthorised meetings with Israeli politicians
- A prominent Brexiteer, she once argued Boris Johnson was the only person who could save Brexit and the Tories
- Rewarded with the position of home secretary in Mr Johnson’s first cabinet
- Recently sided with a delegation of Cabinet ministers urging Mr Johnson to step down
Grant Shapps
Transport Secretary
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace appears to be the favourite to replace Boris Johnson as PM and party leader among Tory party members.
A YouGov poll of 716 Conservative party members placed Ben Wallace just ahead of Penny Mordaunt, who was followed Rishi Sunak.
Under the current rules, candidates need the support of eight Conservative MPs to stand.
If there are more than two candidates, Tory MPs hold a series of votes until just two remain.
At that point there is a ballot of the wider Conservative party membership to select the winner.
The timescale for each contest is decided by the 1922 Committee of backbench Tory MPs, and the committee could vote to change the rules before the contest takes place.