Jeremy Hunt
Boris Johnson is leading the contest to become Britain's next Prime Minister after receiving 114 votes, well ahead of runner up Jeremy Hunt who got 43. Andrea Leadsom, Mark Harper and Esther McVey are out of the race after failing to garner enough votes. Further rounds of voting will whittle down the list of candidates until a winner is announced in late July.
Boris Johnson, Jeremy Hunt, Michael Gove lead the pack of seven contenders. Here's where they all stand on Brexit, the NHS and other key issues.
Andrea Leadsom, Mark Harper and Esther McVey all eliminated.
Home secretary casts himself as the "change candidate" as he underlines working-class background.
The five things you need to know about politics today
Frontrunner's backers also more likely than Hunt and Gove to have joined party since referendum, academic analysis finds
The five things you need to know about politics today
Each goes through to the first ballot on Thursday after winning 8 MPs needed to stay in contest.
From Lorraine Kelly vs Esther McVey to Victoria Derbyshire's clanger with Jeremy Hunt's surname.
The hardline Brexiteer stands alone among the 11 candidates to be the UK’s next PM in saying he is “probably not” a feminist.
About Jeremy Hunt
According to his website: "In December 2005 he was appointed Shadow Minister for Disabled People, where he successfully campaigned for the BBC to increase the amount of subtitling on its programmes. He also campaigned strongly for simplification of the benefits system for disabled people and individual social care budgets. In July 2007 he was appointed to the Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport where he has campaigned for more philanthropy for the arts, local TV, superfast broadband, a schools Olympics and a strengthened domestic tourism industry. "In May 2010 Jeremy was appointed Secretary of State for Culture, Olympics, Media and Sport in the new Conservative - Liberal Democrat coalition. In September 2012 he was appointed Secretary of State for Health in the Prime Minister's Cabinet reshuffle. "Jeremy divides his time between Westminster and his constituency home in Farnham. He married his wife Lucia in July 2009 and they have a son and a daughter."