James Cleverly knocked OUT of Tory leadership race in last round of MP voting – as Jenrick & Badenoch go head-to-head

JAMES CLEVERLY has crashed out of the Tory leadership contest – pitting Kemi Badenoch and Robert Jenrick in a battle for the crown.

A shock final vote of Conservative MPs saw Mr Cleverly plummet from the top spot to last place in the space of 24 hours.

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James Cleverly crashed out in final Tory MPs leadership ballotCredit: Alamy
Robert Jenrick is the former immigration minister

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Robert Jenrick is the former immigration ministerCredit: Reuters
Kemi Badenoch went into the final round as the grassroots favourite

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Kemi Badenoch went into the final round as the grassroots favouriteCredit: Getty

The Shadow Home Secretary – viewed as the centrist candidate – dropped from 39 votes to 37.

Ms Badenoch went from 30 to 42, with Mr Jenrick just behind on 41 having gone up from 31.

It means the two right-wingers will face off in a final ballot of around 150,000 Tory members.

They will slug it out for almost a month before a winner is declared on November 2.

Mr Cleverly went into the final round as the bookies’ favourite after a dominating performance at the Conservative party conference in Birmingham last week.

He shocked onlookers yesterday after leapfrogging Mr Jenrick into first place.

A recent poll of Conservative Home members showed Mr Cleverly would beat Mr Jenrick in a final run-off.

But it also showed rank-and-file darling Ms Badenoch edging them both.

The Shadow Communities Secretary went into the final 24 hours of campaigning insisting the members’ deserve that chance to vote for her.

After yesterday’s ballot – which knocked out Tom Tugendhat – Mr Jenrick and Ms Badenoch were virtually neck and neck, on 31 and 30 votes respectively.

It sparked a last-gasp push for supporters, with both claiming to be the best standard-bearer of the Tory right against Mr Cleverly.

Tory leadership results – fourth round

THE fourth round results:

Kemi Badenoch: 42

Robert Jenrick: 41

James Cleverly: 37

How the contest works:

September 4: First round of Tory MP voting to eliminate one candidate

September 10: Second round of Tory MP voting to eliminate one candidate

September 29 – October 2: Final four candidates make their pitches at Conservative party conference in Birmingham

October 8: Third round of Tory MP voting to eliminate one candidate

October 9: Fourth round of Tory MP voting to eliminate one candidate. The final two go to a vote of the wider party membership

November 2: New Tory leader announced