then, starting with. the financial times is leading on the conservative leadership contest they report that senior conservative party figures are plotting to rapidly thin out the i is also focussing on the leadership contest but they describe it as sunak versus one of the rest . the guardian s front page is about the leadership contest. they report that tory rivals are scrambling for supporters meanwhile the mirror s front page is dedicated to ambulance crews being stuck outside a&e. they say patients are waiting up to 27 hours and the daily star is all about the heatwave, claiming britain will be hotter than hawaii tomorrow so, let s begin. tory rivals scramble for supporters, this is all about how many supporters they will need to get through to the next round, and it is all still up in the air? we through to the next round, and it is all still up in the air? all still up in the air? we are expecting all still up in the air? we are expecting to all still up in
through to the next round, and it is all still up in the air? all still up in the air? we are expecting all still up in the air? we are expecting to all still up in the air? we are expecting to have all still up in the air? we are expecting to have the - all still up in the air? we are expecting to have the big - all still up in the air? we are - expecting to have the big decision from the 1922 committee tomorrow, which will spell out the timeline of how this leadership election is going to work. lots of different papers have different speculation, or different predictions as to what this decision might be, it seems like quite a common theme is that the thresholds for the number of backers that each candidate will need will be relatively high, purely because we have a very short space of time for this campaign to run before we will break up for summer recess. so, the higher the threshold is for supporters to begin with, the more the list gets whittled down to a smaller, more man