Michael Gove Should Be Disqualified From Leadership Race Says Ken Clarke

'I think Michael Gove would do us all a favour if he were to stand down now'
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Former Tory Chancellor Ken Clarke has laid into Prime Ministerial hopeful Michael Gove.

Speaking on the Today show, the 75-year-old admitted he had not yet chosen who to suppor in the leadership race, but singled out Gove as not worthy and urged him to drop out.

Pro-EU campaigner Clarke said: "I do think Michael Gove would do us all a favour if he were to stand down now and speed up the process.

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Former Tory Chancellor Ken Clarke has taken aim at Michael Gove's leadership aspirations
PA/PA Archive

"This kind of public performance is more suited for the election of a student union than it is to be Prime Minister of this country at a time of grave, grave potential crisis."

Gove shocked Westminster on Thursday by launching a leadership bid. He had been expected to support former London Mayor Boris Johnson’s bid to succeed David Cameron, but his announcement saw Johnson dramatically drop out of the race.

"I was one of those who was personally appalled by the idea of Boris Johnson being Prime Minister,” Clarke continued.

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Michael Gove announced his bid to run on Wednesday
Matt Dunham/AP

He added: "[But] I think it’s not encouraging that he stood alongside Boris throughout his campaign as his right-hand man.

"He now objects to a newspaper article that he’d obviously seen and approved of.

"We don’t want to add to tragedy too much of an air of farce. And for him to emerge now as Prime Minister and say 'I’m going to reunite the party and have a clear vision of what I want to do' is, I think, unlikely.

"I think he should be disqualified in this contest and I do think we ought to turn away from these personality battles."

Gove will set out further details of his plans for the premiership in a speech in Westminster on Friday.

The Justice Secretary has said said he came to the conclusion that fellow Vote Leave campaigner Johnson could not provide the unity or the leadership to take Britain out of the European Union.

Gove said: “In the last four days I had a chance to see up close and personal how Boris dealt with some of the decisions we needed to make in order to take this country forward.

“During that period I had hoped that Boris would rise to the occasion because inevitably when you have a leadership election, people are tested, questions are asked of them, tests are set.

“Boris has formidable qualities but I saw him seek to meet and not pass those tests. I also thought ultimately, can I recommend to my friends that this person is right to be prime minister?”