Key events
Jenrick has almost caught up with Badenoch in popularity with Tory members, poll suggests
While Robert Jenrick is under pressure this morning because of his SAS/ECHR comments, there is good news for him in some YouGov polling for Sky News. As Sky reports, it suggests that over the last six weeks Kemi Badenochâs 18-point lead with Tory members as their favourite for next leader has massively shrunk. Skyâs Sam Coates reports:
Tory members opted for Ms Badenoch by 59% to Mr Jenrickâs 41% six weeks ago – an 18-point lead – if the pair were head to head in the final round.
Now they would choose Ms Badenoch by 52% to Mr Jenrickâs 48%, only a four-point lead, according to the new Sky News poll of 802 Tory members conducted over nine days to Sunday night.
Badenoch is still ahead on this measure. But it seems likely that Badenoch wonât make the final two (thatâs why Jenrick is the bookmakersâ favourite, not Badenoch), and if Badenoch is not on the final ballot, the YouGov polling suggests Jenrick would beat any other potential contender.
Why do people think Badenoch wonât make the final two, when voting in the last MPsâ ballot was relatively close (Jenrick 33, Badenoch 28, James Cleverly and Tom Tugendhat both on 21)?
First, because when MPs vote again next week, the 16 votes for Mel Stride (eliminated) will be up for grabs, and it is assumed they will go for someone more in the One Nation tradition rather than Badenoch, who is arguably the most rightwing candidate in the race (even though she has not adopted the hardest line on immigration and the ECHR).
And, second, it is assumed that Tugendhat (high chance) and Cleverly (low chance) are the candidates most likely to be knocked out in the next vote. That means, because of their politics, it is not thought many of their votes will go to Badenoch when MPs vote for the second time next week, on Thursday, to choose the top two from a list of three.
The YouGov polling also suggests that, if Jenrick and Cleverly are the two names on the final ballot (a reasonable assumption, although no one can say for sure), Jenrick has a narrow lead, but not enough to make the result a foregone conclusion. Coates says:
The polls show Mr Cleverly trailing Mr Jenrick by just four points in the final round. If they are head to head, Mr Jenrick gets 52% and Mr Cleverly 48%. Against Ms Badenoch, the gap is slightly bigger – eight points – with her on 54% and him on 46%.
Mr Tugendhat fares the worst in the final round, according to the polling. He would lose to both Ms Badenoch and Mr Jenrick 58% to 42% – by 16 points.
Coates has put all the final round scenarios from the polling on social media.
This is from Kevin Schofield from HuffPost UK on Robert Jenrickâs Today programme interview. (See 9.08am.)
Pretty clear, having listened to Robert Jenrickâs interview with @MishalHusain, that he doesnât have any evidence to back up his claim that the SAS are killing terrorists rather than capturing them because they believe the ECHR will just let them go.
And this is from my colleague Ben Quinn.
Robert Jenrick almost *more* uncomfortable about being reminded he backed Remainâ ï¸ than the lack of evidence around his claim UK special forces are now killing rather than capturing because of the ECHR#r4today
Jenrick defends claim about SAS killing not capturing terrorists due to ECHR, saying his point ‘absolutely correct’
This is what Robert Jenrick told the Today programme this morning when Mishal Husain asked him to defend the line in the video he released yesterday where he said: âOur special forces are killing rather than capturing terrorists because our lawyers tell us that if theyâre caught, the European court [of human rights] will set them free.â
Husain asked where this was happening.
In response, Jenrick said he was just reflecting what Ben Wallace told the Telegraph last year. (See 8.46am.) Jenrick said:
The point I was making is one that former defense secretary Ben Wallace has made, which is that our human rights apparatus, including the ECHR [European convention on human rights], is encroaching on the battlefield, and it is impacting the decisions that our generals and military decision makers are taking as to what kind of action is required in these difficult situations.
And I think thatâs putting an unnecessary and unfair burden upon them when they should be taking the right decisions for our safety as a country.
Husain said Jenrick says special forces âare killingâ not capturing terrorists. She asked again if he thought this was happening now. And, again, Jenrick just referred to what Wallace said. Husain tried again at least a couple more times, but just got the same answer.
When she put it to him that he should have chosen his words more carefully, Jenrick said he did not agree. âThe point I was making was absolutely correct,â he said.
Husain also pointed out that, although Jenrick was quoting Wallace to defend his point, Wallace in his Telegraph interview explicitly said he was not calling for the UK to leave the ECHR.
Tory leadership rivals turn on Jenrick over claims SAS âkilling, not capturing, terroristsâ
Good morning. In a leadership contest, sometimes the dynamic changes because one candidate has a postive breakthrough moment (like David Cameron did in 2005, when his passionate, no-notes speech to the Tory conference turned him almost overnight into the favourite). But more often the odds shift because someone has messed up. Kemi Badenochâs campaign faltered this week after her maternity pay gaffe. And now Robert Jenrick, the bookmakersâ favourite, has also made an error serious enough to cost him support.
Yesterday he released a video claiming that that UK special forces are âkilling rather than capturingâ terrorists because of fears that European laws would free any detained assailants. As Rajeev Syal, Jessica Elgot and Dan Sabbagh report, he has been condemned for saying this by Labour and by figures in the military.
Now fellow leadership candidates are also piling in, saying that he is wrong and suggesting that his comments are maligning special forces.
In an interview on Sky News this morning, Tom Tugendhat, a former soldier, was asked if he agreed with Jenrick that the SAS were killing rather than capturing people because of human rights laws. Tugendhat replied:
No, I donât. I think what he said is wrong, and Iâm afraid demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of military operations and the law of armed conflict.
Iâm extremely concerned that such words should not be seen in any way to encourage people to take any action other than surrender to British forces when asked to do so.
I think heâs wrong, and demonstrates a fundamental lack of understanding.
And James Cleverly, the former foreign secretary who has also served in the military, also refused to back Jenrickâs claim. Asked on Sky News if Jenrick was right to say the SAS were acting in this way, Cleverly replied:
Youâre going to have to ask Robert to justify that statement.
Thatâs not something which I have heard, thatâs not something which Iâm comfortable repeating.
As I say, if Robert is able to justify that, I think he should.
The British military always abide by international humanitarian law, the law of armed conflict. We have the the most professional military in the world are military. Our military do not murder people.
Jenrick was on the Today programme this morning where he had a difficult time defending what he said. He would not accept that he was wrong, or that he should have chosen his words more carefully, but when asked repeatedly if he was sure the armed forces were âkilling rather than capturingâ terrorists now because of human rights law, he just repeatedly referred to a Telegraph interview that Ben Wallace, the former defence secretary, gave last year where he said:
When we have a threat to the UK, this lunacy of being unable to render people across borders or arrest people in countries whose police forces are unacceptable, means that we are more often than not forced into taking lethal action than actually raiding and detaining.
I will post more from the Jenrick interview soon.
Here is the agenda for the day.
10am: The Tory conference opens, with sessions on the main stage covering policing, the future generation and policy.
2pm: Robert Jenrick takes part in a Q&A on the main stage at conference.
2pm: Tom Tugendhat takes part in an conversation event at a fringe organised by Onward. At 3.10pm he will doing the same at a Centre for Policy Studies fringe.
3pm: James Cleverly does his Q&A on the main stage.
5pm: Kemi Badenoch takes part in an in conversation event at a fringe meeting with the outgoing Spectator editor, Fraser Nelson.
If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line (BTL) or message me on social media. I canât read all the messages BTL, but if you put âAndrewâ in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word.
If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. Iâm still using X and Iâll see something addressed to @AndrewSparrow very quickly. Iâm also trying Bluesky (@andrewsparrowgdn) and Threads (@andrewsparrowtheguardian).
I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos (no error is too small to correct). And I find your questions very interesting too. I canât promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.