Tory leadership: Gove 'standing out of conviction not ambition'
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- UK Politics
Michael Gove has said his decision to stand to become Conservative leader is driven by "conviction" about what is right for the UK not personal ambition.
The justice secretary said that when he concluded Boris Johnson was not the "right person", his "heart told him" that he should put himself forward.
Under his leadership, he said the UK would leave the EU's single market and immigration would be reduced.
But Mr Gove is facing calls to step down to ensure party unity.
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Sources have told the BBC ministers are urging Mr Gove to make way so the party can "unite" around Theresa May ahead of the first round of the contest next week.
Launching his leadership bid, Mr Gove said he had done "everything he could" not to be a candidate, insisting that he had worked "day and night" to make Mr Johnson's candidacy work.
'Clear vision'
But despite Mr Johnson's "formidable talents", he had concluded that he could not take the UK down the "path of change" opened up by the Brexit vote, saying what was needed was "not to muddle through and make the best" but "embrace the change that people voted for".
"I am standing not as a result of calculation but because I have burning desire to transform this country," he said.
Mr Gove said he knew his own limitations but he had "a clear vision of what our future must look like" and had a track record to show he could deliver it. He pledged to end free movement rules by leaving the EU and investing at least £100m in the NHS by 2020.
However, with the Conservative Party still in shock over Mr Gove's decision to split with Mr Johnson, the BBC's political editor Laura Kuenssberg said there was a strategy emerging among some ministers to ensure Home Secretary Theresa May - one of four other candidates in the contest - overwhelmingly wins the first ballot of MPs next Tuesday.
This, it is said, would allow the party to rally round her and cut short the contest.
Mrs May so far has received more pledges of support from Conservative MPs than Mr Gove and the other two candidates - Stephen Crabb, Liam Fox and Andrea Leadsom.
The five contenders have until Tuesday to build support among the 329 Conservative MPs before the first round of voting. The MP with the fewest votes will be eliminated, one at a time, until two remain. They will then go to a vote of the wider party membership.
The winner of the contest is set to be announced on 9 September.
'Machiavellian'
The contest was thrown into confusion on Thursday when Mr Gove said he could no longer support the former mayor of London and was throwing his hat into the ring - a move met with incredulity by the media and many of Mr Johnson's supporters.
Asked whether he had been betrayed by Mr Gove, Mr Johnson told reporters as he left his home that "unfortunately he couldn't get on with what he wanted to do" and it was now "up to somebody else".
Dominic Raab, a former supporter of Mr Johnson who has now switched his support to Mr Gove, said to outsiders the move would look "ugly, horrific and Machiavellian" and insisted Mr Gove and others had tried to make their alliance with Mr Johnson work.
He told BBC Radio 5Live that Mr Gove was now the "change candidate" in the contest, and MP best-placed to "seize the opportunities" offered by Brexit given his track record of "reforming zeal" and also his ability to deliver.
Mr Gove, who launched his own #Gove2016 Twitter account on Friday, has also been backed as a man of "principle and conviction" by the Culture Secretary John Whittingdale.
But Mr Clarke said the justice secretary should now reconsider his shock decision to enter the contest, saying he "would all do us a favour if he stood down now and speed up the process".
"I do think one of the first priorities for a leader of a party and certainly a prime minister is that you should have the trust, as far as possible, of your colleagues," he told Radio 4's Today.
'In flames'
Mr Gove had been an outstanding cabinet minister, he said, but his conduct in recent weeks had not been "encouraging".
"This kind of public performance is more suitable for the student union than it is to be prime minister of this country at a time of grave, grave potential crisis," he added.
Asked whether he was now backing Mrs May, he said she was "in the right class of contender" but he wanted to hear from her and the others how they would executive the process of leaving the EU.
Mrs May has been boosted by the support of the Daily Mail, which told readers on its front page "it must be Theresa," and said "what the country needs most is a solid and steady hand on the tiller".
Also endorsing Mrs May, defence secretary Michael Fallon said she was the right person to steer the country through "the serious challenges we now face".
He said: "Theresa is the best person to lead our exit from the EU so that we reduce immigration and regain sovereignty while protecting our hard won economic growth."
'Grown-ups'
Liam Fox said the focus should squarely be on how the UK negotiated its exit from the EU and got the best possible deal, saying anything else was a serious distraction.
"We're in the process of electing a prime minister who will actually take us out of the European Union, and yet we seem to be permanently distracted by what can only be described as the politics of the Oxford Union in recent days," Radio 4's Today.
"I think it was a distraction, we need Brexit for grown-ups and we need to be talking about the big issues."
Mr Fox said Whitehall needed to be overhauled to reflect the post-Brexit environment, suggesting there was a case for the Department of Business and Department for International Development to be merged inside the Foreign Office.
And Mrs Leadsom said that while Mrs May was a "totally brilliant home secretary", she believed the next prime minister should be someone who "really believes that the UK would be better off once we leave the EU".
"The clear priority is to deliver on the referendum," the energy minister told ITV's Good Morning Britain.
"We have been given an instruction, we now have to get a grip and get on with it."
Who's in the running?
Home Secretary Theresa May: The 59-year-old has replaced Boris Johnson as the bookies' favourite to win the contest. She's held the Home Office brief - often something of a poisoned chalice - since 2010, and is a former Tory party chairman. She says she can offer the "strong leadership" and unity the UK needs, and promised a "positive vision" for the country's future. She backed staying in the EU.Theresa May profile
Justice Secretary Michael Gove: The 48-year-old former newspaper columnist was a key figure in the party's modernisation that led to its return to power in 2010. He was a reforming, if controversial, education secretary between 2010 and 2014, and now holds the Ministry of Justice brief. He was a leading player in the Brexit campaign - which put a strain on his close friendship with David Cameron. He has pitched himself as the candidate that can provide "unity and change." Michael Gove profile
Work and Pensions Secretary Stephen Crabb: The 43-year-old was promoted to the cabinet in 2014 as Welsh secretary, and boosted his profile earlier this year when he took over as work and pensions secretary. A rising star of the Tory party he has promised to unite the party and country following the referendum result and provide stability. Raised on a council estate by a single mother, he has a back story to which many Tory MPs are attracted. Backed Remain. Stephen Crabb profile
Energy minister Andrea Leadsom: The 53-year-old former banker and fund manager was one of the stars of the Leave campaign. A former district councillor, she became MP for South Northamptonshire in 2010 and - after serving as a junior Treasury minister and as a member of the Treasury select committee - she was made a junior minister in the energy and climate change department in May last year. Andrea Leadsom profile
Former cabinet minister Liam Fox: It's second time around for the 54-year-old ex-defence secretary and GP, who came a close third in the 2005 leadership contest. His cabinet career was cut short in 2011 when he resigned following a lobbying row. A Brexit campaigner, and on the right of the party, he has said whoever becomes PM must accept "the instruction" of the British people and not "try to backslide" over EU membership. Liam Fox profile
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