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Ken Clarke rounds on Conservative leadership contenders

Former chancellor Ken Clarke ridiculed contenders for the Tory leadership, as voting begun in the first stage of the process to decide the UK's new Prime Minister.
Former chancellor Ken Clarke ridiculed contenders for the Tory leadership, as voting begun in the first stage of the process to decide the UK's new Prime Minister.

Tory former chancellor Ken Clarke has launched blistering assaults on most of the main contenders in the Conservative leadership race.

In apparently unguarded remarks broadcast by Sky News, Mr Clarke described Home Secretary Theresa May as “a bloody difficult woman”, said Justice Secretary Michael Gove would take the country to war on three fronts, Boris Johnson would make a “ridiculous” prime minister, and Leave campaigner Andrea Leadsom did not really believe in Brexit.

Speaking to former foreign secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind while still wearing a live Sky News mic at the broadcaster’s Westminster studio, Mr Clarke described the situation as a “fiasco”, and said he would probably end up voting for Mrs May, after giving support to Work and Pensions Secretary Stephen Crabb in the early stages of the contest.

Mr Clarke tells Sir Malcolm: “Theresa’s a bloody difficult woman, but you and I worked for Margaret Thatcher.”

The senior Tory goes on to say: “I get on all right with her … and she is good. She’s been at the Home Office far too long, so I only know in detail what her views are on the Home Office.

“She doesn’t know much about foreign affairs.”

The ex-Cabinet minister says of Ms Leadsom: “She’s not one of the mindless, tiny band of lunatics, who think we can have a sort of glorious economic future outside the single market.

“So long as she understands that she is not to deliver on some of the extremely stupid things that she’s been saying.”

Both Tory grandees are disparaging about Mr Gove, with Sir Malcolm saying: “I don’t mind who wins as long as Gove comes third … as long as Gove is not in the final two, I don’t mind what happens.”

Mr Clarke replies: “I don’t think the membership will vote for Gove. I remember being in a discussion once about something we should do in somewhere like Syria or Iraq, and he was so wild, I remember exchanging looks with Liam Fox … who’s much more right wing than me, we were exchanging views, and Liam was raising eyebrows. I think with Michael as prime minister we’d go to war with at least three countries at once.”

But Mr Clarke did praise the Justice Secretary for ruining Mr Johnson’s leadership bid.

“He did us all a favour by getting rid of Boris. The idea of Boris as prime minister is ridiculous,” Mr Clarke said.

Mr Clarke also expressed doubts the ex-London mayor and fellow Leave campaigner Ms Leadsom believed in Brexit at all.

“I don’t think either Andrea Leadsom or Boris Johnson actually are in favour of leaving the European Union. It was the obvious thing that the voters, ie: Conservative Party members, were going to vote Leave.”

Sir Malcolm replied: “I don’t think they cared very much either way.”

Mr Clarke said he thought he would “wind up voting Theresa”, but would support Mr Crabb in the initial stages, even though he does not know what the Work and Pensions Secretary stands for on many issues.

Sir Malcolm told the Press Association that he stood by his damning remarks on Mr Gove, saying: “My comments speak for themselves, and they appear to be shared by quite a high proportion of the human race.”

The former Cabinet minister said it was “naughty” of Sky News to play the exchange with Mr Clarke, but he did not have a problem with the broadcaster.
“It all adds to the sum of human life. It was a bit naughty of them,” Sir Malcolm said.

Sky news anchor Kay Burley insisted that no “surreptitious” recording had been involved in obtaining the exchange.

“This was a live microphone. There was no surreptitious recording going on.

They had both been interviewed and Mr Clarke continued to … sit in front of the microphone,” Ms Burley told viewers.