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Philip Hammond quits: Former chancellor to stand down at general election

Hammond, who lost Tory whip for rebelling on Brexit, says he cannot oppose the party he has supported all his life

Lizzy Buchan
Political Correspondent
Tuesday 05 November 2019 11:40 EST
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Former chancellor Philip Hammond has announced he will stand down at the general election.

In a letter to his constituents, the ex-cabinet minister announced “with great sadness” that he would not seek re-election in Runnymede and Weybridge, in Surrey, in next month’s poll.

Mr Hammond, who was sacked from the Tory Party by Boris Johnson for rebelling against a no-deal Brexit, said standing down after 22 years was “not a decision I have taken lightly”.

But he said the withdrawal of the whip from himself and 20 other colleagues meant he would be forced to stand as an independent in the upcoming poll - and surrender his party membership.

“If I fight the general election as an independent conservative candidate against an official Conservative party candidate, I would cease to be a member of the party,” he said.

“I am saddened to find myself in this position after 45 years of Conservative Party membership, 22 years’ service as a Conservative MP, 12 years as an opposition front-bench spokesman and over 9 years as a cabinet minister, including service as defence secretary, foreign secretary and chancellor of the exchequer.”

In a veiled dig at the prime minister, Mr Hammond said the Tory party had “always had room for a wide range of opinions and has been tolerant of measured dissent”.

“Many parliamentary colleagues have defied the party whip on occasion without any action being taken against them,” he said.

“But however aggrieved I feel at the loss of the whip, and however strongly I believe that we must deliver Brexit through a comprehensive trade agreement with the EU to protect British jobs and prosperity, I remain a Conservative and I cannot, therefore, embark upon a course of action that would represent a direct challenge in a general election to the party I have supported all my adult life.”

Mr Hammond is the latest in a string of high-profile current or former Tories to stand down ahead of the Christmas election.

Nicky Morgan, the culture secretary, surprised many colleagues when she announced she would not stand again, while Amber Rudd, Ken Clarke, Sir Alan Duncan and Sir Michael Fallon have all decided against fighting this election.

Rory Stewart, the former international development secretary, decided to quit to run for mayor of London.

Elsewhere, Anne Milton, another expelled Tory MP, announced she would fight the election as an independent candidate.

She said: “I wrote to the PM yesterday to tell him I felt unable to be a Conservative candidate.”

Ms Milton, a former minister, said she wants to represent her constituency without “being bound by party politics”.

She said: “People have become increasingly frustrated by political parties and their inability to work together for the common good and I believe Guildford needs a credible alternative.”

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