Factbox-Now UK's Boris Johnson Has Quit, Who Might Replace Him?
Five candidates are left in the contest to replace Boris Johnson as British prime minister.
Below are some details on the contenders, who are listed in alphabetical order.
KEMI BADENOCH
Badenoch was elected to parliament for the first time in 2017. She has held junior ministerial jobs, including most recently minister for equalities, but has never served in Cabinet.
A former Conservative member of the London Assembly, she has also served as vice-chair of the Conservative Party. Badenoch, 42, supported leaving the European Union in the 2016 referendum.
She says she believes in limited government "focused on doing some things well, not lots of things badly".
She has said she wants tax cuts, but only if government spending also comes down, and has criticised net-zero emissions targets and restrictions on free speech.
PENNY MORDAUNT
The former defence secretary was sacked by Johnson after she endorsed his rival, Jeremy Hunt, during the 2019 leadership contest.
Mordaunt, 49, was a passionate supporter of leaving the EU and has said she will aim to deliver the benefits of Brexit and help Britain recover from economic shocks such as the pandemic.
Currently a junior trade minister, Mordaunt called the COVID lockdown-breaking parties in government "shameful" and has said that if she is prime minister, leadership has to change to be less about the leader.
RISHI SUNAK
In his campaign launch video, Sunak promised to confront the difficult economic backdrop with "honesty, seriousness and determination", rather than piling the burden onto future generations.
The 42-year-old became finance minister in early 2020 and was praised for a COVID economic rescue package, including a costly jobs retention programme that averted mass unemployment.
But he later faced criticism for not giving enough cost-of-living support to households. Revelations this year about his wealthy wife's non-domiciled tax status, and a fine he received for breaking COVID lockdown rules, have damaged his standing.
His tax-and-spend budget last year put Britain on course for its biggest tax burden since the 1950s, undermining his claims to favour lower taxes.
Sunak voted to leave the EU in the 2016 referendum.
LIZ TRUSS
The foreign secretary has been the darling of the Conservative Party's grassroots and has regularly topped polls of party members carried out by the website Conservative Home.
Truss has a carefully cultivated public image and was photographed in a tank last year, echoing a famous 1986 photo of Thatcher.
She spent the first two years of Johnson's premiership as international trade secretary and is now in charge of dealing with the EU over post-Brexit trade rules for Northern Ireland, where she has taken an increasingly tough line in negotiations.
Truss, 46, initially campaigned against Brexit but after the 2016 referendum said she had changed her mind.
TOM TUGENDHAT
The chair of parliament's foreign affairs committee, and a former soldier who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan. However, he is relatively untested because he has never served in Cabinet.
Tugendhat, 49, has been a regular critic of Johnson and would offer his party a clean break with previous governments.
He says he is a low-tax Conservative who did not support the rise in National Insurance, and has said fuel tax is "crippling" for many people.
He voted to remain in the EU.
($1 = 0.7971 pound)
© Copyright Thomson Reuters 2024. All rights reserved.