Skip to main content
Logo icon
Lord Lexden

Main navigation

  • About
  • Articles & Reviews
  • Letters
  • News
  • Parliament
  • Publications
  • Contact
Logo icon
Lord Lexden

Wanted: a sensible system for choosing Conservative Party leaders

  • Tweet
Monday, 8 August, 2022
  • Articles
sunak truss

Should Conservative Party members have the final say? There are many who think the choice should be made by elected MPs, who have to work day by day with the leader. In a letter published in The Spectator on 6 August, Alistair Lexden recalled the efforts  made in 2005 - which almost succeeded - to change the existing system introduced in 1998. Under such proposals the current contest would have been decided in some three weeks instead of dragging on interminably, leaving the government of the country in limbo.

Sir: Douglas Murray rightly deplores the Conservative party’s ‘brutally inefficient leadership contest’ (article, 23 July). How different it would have been if Michael Howard’s wise reform plans had been adopted after the 2005 election. As a last service to the party he had brought back from disaster, Howard worked assiduously before his resignation as leader in late 2005 to garner support for the kind of leadership election rules that a sensible and reasonably efficient party should have. MPs would spend a couple of weeks sounding out opinion in their constituencies; the results would be weighed up by the 1922 Committee chairman, and the two most popular candidates made known; MPs would then vote. Michael Spicer, then 1922 Committee chairman, noted in his diary on 27 September 2005: ‘leadership rule change ballot produces a majority in favour of change of about 61 per cent, which is not enough (63.6 per cent needed).’ Why has no one sought to build on the foundations that Howard created to equip the Party with a scheme that avoids the disaster likely to occur if MPs do not choose the leader?

Alistair Lexden
House of Lords, London SW1

You may also be interested in

tree

Labour's schools tax raid sums don't add up

Monday, 16 June, 2025
The following letter was published in The Daily Telegraph on 16 June in slightly edited form.SIR – At the spending review, Rachel Reeves boasted  proudly that she had ended “the tax loophole which exempted private schools from VAT”, a grossly misleading description of the tax exemptio

Show only

  • Articles
  • Recent News
  • Speeches

Lord Lexden OBE

Footer

  • About RSS
  • Accessibility
  • Cookies
  • Privacy
  • About Lord Lexden
  • Articles and Reviews
  • Letters
  • Parliament
  • Publications
Promoted by Alan Mabbutt on behalf of Lord Lexden, both at 4 Matthew Parker Street, London, SW1H 9HQ
Copyright 2025 Lord Lexden OBE . All rights reserved.
Powered by Bluetree