
The people endorsements of Mr Johnson remain well short of the crucial 100 figure, with just 59 Conservative MPs having put their names behind his bid by Saturday afternoon.
According
to report an ally who is close to Boris Johnson has claimed that he has passed
the threshold of 100 MPs’support needed to allow him to join the battle to
succeed the former prime minister Liz Truss.
In a
message which electrified the contest for the Conservative leadership, Tory MP
Sir James Duddridge tweeted: “New - Boris Johnson has more than 100 backers.”
And
supporters of leadership rival Rishi Sunak were sceptical of the new claim.
Durham MP Richard Holden said that Sir James’s figure for MP endorsements far
outstripped those which have been publicly “because they don’t exist”.
Sir James
told The Independent that the 100 figure related to “supporters prepared to
sign his nomination papers”.
The claim
came shortly after the former PM arrived back in the UK from a Caribbean
holiday, amid expectations he will soon declare his intention to make a
remarkable return to Downing Street less than two months after handing over to
Ms Truss.
Leadership
rival Rishi Sunak has already comfortably surpassed the threshold for getting
his name onto the ballot paper by the deadline of 2pm on Monday.
With Penny
Mordaunt - the only contender so far to announce her candidacy - lagging behind
on 25 nominations, the Johnson camp’s claim sets the scene for a two-horse race
to be decided by Tory members.
While MPs
will vote on candidates who clear the nomination hurdle on Monday, their vote
on the final two contenders is only indicative, leaving the final decision to
an online ballot of members to conclude on Friday.
However,
it is thought that an overwhelming victory for one candidate in the indicative
vote may persuade the runner-up to pull out.
It is
unclear why such a large proportion of Mr Johnson’s backers appear unwilling to
go public with their support, with suspicions that they may be keeping open the
option of switching to Sunak if he looks like being the runaway winner.
Polling
suggests that Mr Johnson may have a strong chance of winning the final members’
ballot even if he finishes second to the former chancellor on MPs’ votes.
It had
been thought he may not even announce his candidacy until he was confident of
securing 100 nominations, in order to avoid damaging his own reputation as an
election winner.
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