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UK: Portillo backtracks after rivals strong showing

Nicholas Watt, political correspondent

The Guardian

Thursday 12 Jul 2001

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Shadow chancellor attempts to cast off liberal image and redesign
campaign

Michael Portillo yesterday watered down his liberal views on drugs and
gay rights in an attempt to woo Tory MPs after his poor performance in
the first round of the leadership contest.

On the eve of the re-run of Tuesday's vote, the shadow chancellor
claimed his call for a debate on legalisation of cannabis and a review
of Tory support for section 28 formed no part of his campaign.

"I have not raised these issues," Mr Portillo told BBC Radio 4's Today
programme. "These issues are not part of my campaign." Portillo
supporters, who are unsettled after he polled only 49 votes on Tuesday,
said that the shadow chancellor was recalibrating his campaign in the
light of a backlash among Tory MPs at his remarks on drugs and section
28.

They admitted that Mr Portillo had raised the contentious issues, but
had only done so under questioning.

Tories on the right were dismayed when Mr Portillo told MPs on Monday
that he would review the party's support for section 28. The following
day Mr Portillo appeared to suggest the time had come for the
legalisation of cannabis.

Mr Portillo's seeming u-turn came after the Tory leadership contest was
thrown wide open on Tuesday when the shadow chancellor failed to secure
a decisive lead. Iain Duncan Smith, main candidate of the right,
surprised all wings of the party when he came second with 39 votes.

The Thatcher favourite was closely followed by the former chancellor,
Kenneth Clarke, on 36 votes. David Davis and Michael Ancram tied in last
place on 21 votes, forcing a rerun today.

Mr Duncan Smith is now regarded as such a threat that the former prime
minister John Major is said to have intervened to warn MPs that they
should not vote for the man who led a series of Eurosceptic rebellions
during his premiership in the mid-1990s.

Mr Major believes that Mr Duncan Smith would fail to take the Tories
back to the centre ground where elections are won.

The Portillo camp are confident they will stay ahead of Mr Duncan Smith,
despite signs that supporters of the shadow chancellor may defect. But
Portillo supporters have been jolted by their rival's strong showing,
which is likely to deprive the shadow chancellor of the decisive lead he
needs if he is to win round wavering party members in the final round.

Despite the attention on Mr Duncan Smith, supporters of Mr Clarke are
hoping that their man will pull ahead in today's ballot. They are
pinning their hopes on supporters of Mr Ancram, the "unity" candidate,
transferring their support to the One Nation former chancellor.

But Clarke supporters were preparing the ground if he fails to come
second - the result he must achieve if his name is go before 300,000
party members who have the final say.

Two former cabinet ministers said that Sir Michael Spicer, the chairman
of the backbench 1922 committee who is running the parliamentary
contest, should allow three candidates to go before the membership if
there are only a few votes separating Mr Duncan Smith and Mr Clarke

Lord Howe of Aberavon, the pro-European former chancellor, warned that
the Conservative party would face "substantial defections" if Mr
Clarke's name was kept off the final ballot paper. His remarks were
echoed by the former home secretary, Lord Brittan.


 

 

 

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