As many as a dozen candidates are eyeing up replacing British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who is quitting after his Conservative Party turned on him.
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Johnson said he would step down as Conservative leader and prime minister following resignations by more than 50 government ministers, and many of his MPs telling him they wanted him out of office.
The jostling to choose his successor - a process that could take weeks or even months - is underway, with senior figures and some lesser known MPs expected to throw their hat in the ring.
In the meantime, Johnson, brought down by a series scandals and a loss of trust in his integrity, remains in the job, a situation that opponents, and many in his own party, say is untenable.
"I think Conservative MPs have got to get rid of him today," Ed Davey, leader of the Liberal Democrats told BBC TV.
"It's just ludicrous that he's the caretaker prime minister. He's never cared and looked after anything in his life."
The main opposition Labour Party has also called for Johnson to go straightaway, promising to hold a confidence vote in parliament if he is not ousted immediately.
However the new education minister said Johnson would stay on until a replacement was found.
"(Johnson) remains prime minister until a new prime minister is found, that's how our system works," Education Secretary James Cleverly told Sky News.
Johnson, who less than three years ago won an election with a large majority, was brought down by scandals that included breaches of COVID-19 pandemic lockdown rules, a luxury renovation of his official residence and the appointment of a minister who had been accused of sexual misconduct.
Johnson told his cabinet of top ministers - some of whom were appointed after the announcement he would be resigning - that he would not be making any big changes of direction that would tie the hands of his successor.
But in his speech to the country announcing his exit, he did not use the word "resign" or "resignation", and described his forced departure as "eccentric".
Such is the lingering distrust in his behaviour that former Conservative prime minister John Major said Johnson should leave now.
Meanwhile, many Conservatives are turning their attention to replacing him full-time, with no shortage of ambitious candidates.
So far just Attorney General Suella Braverman and Tom Tugendhat, chairman of parliament's Foreign Affairs Select Committee, have officially confirmed their desire to be the next leader, but about a dozen others have been tipped to consider running for the job.
Among those who are considered to be front runners are former finance minister Rishi Sunak, foreign minister Liz Truss and defence minister Ben Wallace, although none of them have as yet declared their intention to stand.
Although the exact rules and timetable for the contest have yet to be set out, Conservative MPs will whittle down the hopefuls to a final two candidates, and then the party's members - numbering fewer than 200,000 people - will decide which one will be leader, and the next prime minister.
Australian Associated Press