Support 110 years of independent journalism.

  1. Politics
20 June 2019updated 25 Jun 2021 7:26am

Boris Johnson wins fourth ballot as Jeremy Hunt slips to third place

By Stephen Bush

Boris Johnson has won again. In the fourth round of voting for the new Conservative leader, he won by a comfortable margin. This time, he won an absolute majority of the vote, with 157 votes, as Jeremy Hunt slipped to third place, with 59 votes just behind of Michael Gove with 61 votes. Sajid Javid was eliminated.

The result is not particularly surprising: the votes of the eliminated Rory Stewart were never going to fall for Javid, and the expectation was that Gove would do slightly better at picking up Stewart’s supporters than Hunt, due to the perception that Gove will give Johnson a harder ride in the hustings and that Gove is more alive to the threat posed by a hard Brexit than the Union.

But Hunt’s hopes of reaching the final ballot of members aren’t dead yet – among Javid’s supporters, there are plenty of MPs who are more inclined to his politics and approach than they are Gove’s. That Javid appealed to MPs pledging to be a non-destructive opponent to the frontrunner in the ballot of members may mean that his backers now swing behind Hunt, rather than the more combative Gove. Hunt will hope that Gove fails to gain much ground in the next round – or that Team Johnson decide to lend a helping hand to a candidate who they may think will be less belligerent in the final round than Gove.  

Content from our partners
<strong>What you need to know about private markets </strong>
Work isn't working: how to boost the nation's health and happiness
The dementia crisis: a call for action