
Who is favourite to replace Theresa May as UK prime minister?
Boris Johnson: 11/4
According to Oddschecker, the favourite to take control of Tory leadership is Brexit campaigner and former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson.
In Johnson’s resignation letter from July 2018, he wrote that the Brexit “dream is dying, suffocated by needless self-doubt.”
Johnson, 54, who also served as Mayor of London from 2008-2016, has been one of the most vocal Brexiteers from the onset.
“Of course I’m going to go for it,” the BBC cited Johnson as saying on Thursday.
With the Tories sinking in the polls, the Conservatives could turn to Johnson’s bullish Brexit policies to lead the party.
Dominic Raab: 13/2
Bookmakers have dubbed Esher and Walton MP, Dominic Raab, the second most likely Tory to command leadership of the party.
Raab followed David Davis as the UK’s Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union before resigning from May’s cabinet in November 2018, due to his disapproval over the Cabinet position on the draft Brexit withdrawal agreement.
Raab, who studied law at Oxford and then Cambridge, played a prominent role in the Leave campaign of 2016 and has potentially candidacy has already inspired a ‘Ready for Raab’ social media campaign promoting the MP’s claim to conservative leadership.
In leading up to the original March 29 Brexit deadline, Raab said that a no-deal Brexit scenario was not his “preferred outcome” but would rather leave the EU without a deal than filing a Brexit extension.
Michael Gove: 10/1
Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Michael Gove is next on the list with 10-to-1 odds to seize command of the Conservatives.
Gove was one of the first politicians to publically back Brexiteers and described his decision to campaign for Britain to leave the EU in the 2016 referendum as “the most difficult decision of my political life”.
Gove, who is also an author and columnist for The Times, has recently warned hardline Tory eurosceptics that leaving the EU without a deal “wasn’t the message of the campaign I helped lead”.
Gove told ITV News reporter Robert Preston on Sunday that it is in the national interest to “get Brexit over the line,” and it is what the Prime Minister Theresa May needs to focus on.
Jeremy Hunt: 11/1
Coming in fourth right behind Gove with 11-to-1 odds is current British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt.
During the 2016 referendum to leave the EU, Hunt supported Britain’s remain campaign.
In 2017 however, he stated that he had changed his mind and now supported Brexit, citing the “arrogance of the EU Commission” in responding to the UK government in the Brexit negotiations.
Hunt has acknowledged his party may be heading for “disastrous” European elections results due to the Conservatives inability to deliver Brexit on time. He has also said alternative options of a general election and a second referendum were “difficult.”
Matthew Hancock: 16/1
After the top four potential candidates, odds seem to drop for the next batch of Conservative leaders. Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Matt Hancock is next in line according to oddsmaker with a 16-to-1 chance to become Tory captain.
Rory Stewart: 20/1
Coming in with the next best odds is recently appointed Secretary of State for International Development, Rory Stewart, has served as MP for Penrith and The Border since 2010.
Stewart, 46, gained notoriety as senior collation official in Iraq from 2003-04 and for his book Occupational Hazards or The Prince of the Marshes, about his time governing in Iraq.
The Hong Kong-born, Harvard graduate said following Brexit that Britain must “make the best out of Brexit,” and that the UK should be “energetic and optimistic” about their position. Stewart stressed the need to invest now more than ever in “rebuilding Britain’s international position.”
Sajid Javid: 20/1
Another 20-to-1 longshot is current Home Secretary Sajid Javid. The MP for Bromsgrove in Worcestershire since the general election of 2010, Javid is also a former managing director at Deutsche Bank who was an early advocate for an EU referendum but remained a backer for the Remain campaign to the disappointment of pro-Brexit Tories.
Penny Mordaunt: 22/1
The first woman the bookmakers are taking seriously to bid for Tory chief is current Secretary of State for Defence Penny Mordaunt.








