More actions
| Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
== Candidates == | == Candidates == | ||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
|+ | |||
!Candidate | |||
!Political office and home city | |||
!Campaign | |||
!Nomination(s) | |||
|- | |||
|Audrick Hill | |||
|Former prime minister (3019; 3020); former foreign minister (3025) | |||
Assemblyman for Washington | |||
|"Third Time's a Charm..." | |||
| | |||
* Himself | |||
* Luke Ford | |||
* Ray Banes | |||
|- | |||
|Basil Lethbridge | |||
|Chancellor of the Exchequer (3025-present); chairman of the Conservative party (3025-present); former environment minister (3021-3022; 3022); former foreign minister (3022-3023); former social policy minister (3025) | |||
Assemblyman for Juneville | |||
|"For the Better" | |||
| | |||
* Himself | |||
* Gerald Stevenson | |||
* Bernard Canterbury | |||
|- | |||
|Iman De'Ath | |||
|Cities minister (3025-present); former deputy prime minister (3025); former trade minister (3022; 3024; 3025); former foreign minister (3020); former environment minister (3020-3021) | |||
Assemblyman for Juneville | |||
|"Integrity You Can Trust; Progress You Can See" | |||
| | |||
* Herself | |||
* Lucy Burgers | |||
|- | |||
|Abigail Went | |||
|Former leader of the National Assembly (3022-3023); corporate sectors minister (3022); former first minister of state (3022); former transportation minister (3020) | |||
Assemblyman for Washington | |||
|"Live, Laugh, Love: the Wiltshire Way" | |||
| | |||
* Herself | |||
* Wil Thorne | |||
|- | |||
|Ben Bravatnik | |||
|Former junior minister for energy (3022-3023) | |||
Assemblyman for Minevgrad | |||
|"Facing the Harsh Realities of Recovery" | |||
| | |||
* Himself | |||
|} | |||
=== Declared candidates === | === Declared candidates === | ||
Revision as of 12:35, 28 November 2025
A leadership ballot will be held on 5 December 3025 to elect the next leader of the Conservative Party. The winner of the contest will succeed Beau Martin as prime minister on 1 January 3026.
Prime Minister Beau Martin stood down following a dispute over the potential for a DCM and Paxemese trade agreement.
Procedure
The Conservative caucus release the rules for their leadership contest, which is now scheduled to take place on 5 December. Candidates will require the nominations of two sitting assemblymen (this may include themselves, should they be an assemblyman). Then, nominated candidates will face in a first round, with a majority of the caucus (14 votes) required to win. Should no candidate win an outright majority on the first ballot, subsequent ballots will be held, with the last-place finisher in each round being eliminated. At any point, if a candidate receives a majority of the Assembly Conservative caucus, they will be designated the winner.
Candidates
| Candidate | Political office and home city | Campaign | Nomination(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Audrick Hill | Former prime minister (3019; 3020); former foreign minister (3025)
Assemblyman for Washington |
"Third Time's a Charm..." |
|
| Basil Lethbridge | Chancellor of the Exchequer (3025-present); chairman of the Conservative party (3025-present); former environment minister (3021-3022; 3022); former foreign minister (3022-3023); former social policy minister (3025)
Assemblyman for Juneville |
"For the Better" |
|
| Iman De'Ath | Cities minister (3025-present); former deputy prime minister (3025); former trade minister (3022; 3024; 3025); former foreign minister (3020); former environment minister (3020-3021)
Assemblyman for Juneville |
"Integrity You Can Trust; Progress You Can See" |
|
| Abigail Went | Former leader of the National Assembly (3022-3023); corporate sectors minister (3022); former first minister of state (3022); former transportation minister (3020)
Assemblyman for Washington |
"Live, Laugh, Love: the Wiltshire Way" |
|
| Ben Bravatnik | Former junior minister for energy (3022-3023)
Assemblyman for Minevgrad |
"Facing the Harsh Realities of Recovery" |
|
Declared candidates
- Audrick Hill, former prime minister (3019; 3020); former foreign minister (3025)
- Basil Lethbridge, chancellor of the Exchequer (3025-present); chairman of the Conservative party (3025-present); former environment minister (3021-3022; 3022); former foreign minister (3022-3023); former social policy minister (3025)
- Iman De'Ath, cities minister (3025-present); former deputy prime minister (3025); former trade minister (3022; 3024; 3025); former foreign minister (3020); former environment minister (3020-3021)
- Abigail Went, former leader of the National Assembly (3022-3023); corporate sectors minister (3022); former first minister of state (3022); former transportation minister (3020)
- Ben Bravatnik, former junior minister for energy (3022-3023)
Declined to be candidates
- Gerald Stevenson (endorsed Lethbridge)
- Jacob Erin-Strife
- Rab Bennet (endorsed Lethbridge)
- Jan Rau
- Luke Ford (endorsed Hill)
- Silas Braun (endorsed Hill)
- Sal Mackenzie (endorsed Hill)
- Ray Banes (endorsed Hill)
- Bernard Canterbury (endorsed Lethbridge)
- Lia Caturla
- Edward Krushner
- Owen Lassiter (endorsed De'Ath)