Key quotes from the Conservative Party leadership election
The winner of the Conservative leadership contest is set to be announced on Saturday after months of campaigning.
The winner of the Conservative leadership contest will be announced on Saturday, following months of speeches, debates and gaffes.
Here are some of the key quotes from the leadership campaign.
In his pitch to the Tory conference in Birmingham, the former home secretary urged his colleagues to restore normality to conservative politics, becoming more “enthusiastic, relatable, positive, optimistic”.
After surging into first place after the conference, Mr Cleverly suffered a shock defeat in the final round of MP voting and failed to make the final two.
Ms Badenoch prompted a backlash when she appeared to criticise statutory maternity pay in an interview at the Conservative Party conference.
She later rowed back, insisting that she did “believe in maternity pay” but thought business regulation was too burdensome, while sources close to her accused rival leadership candidates of looking to “score political hits” and not being “serious about getting back into government.”
Mr Jenrick suffered his own backlash during the Tory conference over this claim about British soldiers, part of the opposition to the European Convention on Human Rights that formed the heart of his campaign.
War veteran and rival leadership candidate, Tom Tugendhat, said Mr Jenrick was “wrong” and demonstrated “a fundamental misunderstanding of military operations and the law of armed conflict”, while Mr Cleverly said British soldiers “do not murder people”.
For Theresa May, it was running through fields of wheat. For Robert Jenrick, it was attempting to climb Wolverhampton’s Christmas tree after a few drinks. But for Mr Tugendhat, the naughtiest thing he had ever done was invade another country.
The former soldier, who served in both Iraq and Afghanistan, drew some criticism for “making light” of the conflict during an interview with The Spectator.
Mr Jenrick distanced himself from one of his supporters, Sir Christopher Chope, after the veteran MP appeared to suggest that Ms Badenoch’s three young children meant she would not be able to devote enough attention to being leader of the opposition.
The comment brought back echoes of a previous leadership race, where Andrea Leadsom was forced to apologise in 2016 after appearing to suggest that being a mother made her a better candidate for prime minister than Theresa May.
Leadership candidates largely steered clear of directly criticising their opponents, with attacks being strongly discouraged by Conservative Campaign Headquarters.
But as the contest neared its end, Mr Jenrick became more vocal in his criticism of Ms Badenoch, accusing her of failing to say where she stood on major issues and saying he offered “a plan today” rather than “a plan at some point in the future”.