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The timetable for the October 2022 leadership election was much shorter than the July one. An expedited process was set out; candidates were required to obtain 100 nominations from fellow Conservative MPs before 2 pm on 24 October, and an MPs' ballot followed by an online members' ballot was to be held shortly thereafter if more than one candidate received more than 100 nominations.
Susan Hall, London Assembly member and 2024 Conservative candidate for Mayor of London; Simon Heffer, historian and journalist; Dominic Lawson, journalist and writer; Iain Martin, journalist; Jo-Anne Nadler, former Conservative adviser and journalist; Robert Tombs, historian and writer; Lisa Townsend, PCC for Surrey
Anderson retained seat. He was elected as a Conservative MP in 2019 and defected to Reform UK in March 2024, following his suspension from the Conservative Party. Ashford: Conservative: Sojan Joseph: Labour: Defeated incumbent Damian Green: Ashton-under-Lyne: Labour: Angela Rayner: Labour: Aylesbury: Conservative: Laura Kyrke-Smith: Labour ...
The party, which has been on a push to boost its membership in recent weeks, has seen a number of significant Conservative defections to its ranks, including former Tory minister Andrea Jenkyns ...
This included a record number of Conservative MPs. 29 former Members of Parliament intend to stand in the election. [4] For the first time since 2015, there were no vacant seats at dissolution. The deadline for candidates to be nominated was 16:00 BST on 7 June 2024. [5]
121 Conservative Party members of Parliament (MPs) out of the 650 constituencies were elected to the House of Commons at the 4 July 2024 general election, [1] the lowest number in its history. [2] Party leader Kemi Badenoch is shown in bold.
Voters support abortion rights, but not all voters who support access to reproductive healthcare rank it as their top issue when choosing a presidential candidate. Which brings us to Trump himself.
2022: Member to vacate her seat for an actual paid office under the Crown (Rosie Cooper) – Labour Party; 2024: Former prime minister to lose re-election (Liz Truss) – Conservative Party; 2024: First female Chancellor of the Exchequer (Rachel Reeves) – Labour Party; 2024: Ethnic minority deputy speaker – Conservative Party