Jeremy Hunt: Tories must win the argument if I am to avoid ‘Portillo moment’

Jeremy Hunt has said the Conservatives must “win the argument” across the country if he is to avoid a “Portillo moment” and fail to win his seat.

The Chancellor is standing in Godalming and Ash, a newly created seat with a notional Tory majority of more than 10,000.

But he fears the final result will be decided by 1,500 votes or fewer and he acknowledged he faced becoming the most high-profile casualty if the Tories lose the election.

In a reference to then-cabinet minister Michael Portillo’s election loss in 1997, Mr Hunt told the Sun on Sunday: “If I want to avoid a Portillo moment we have to win the argument with people, not just in this constituency but up and down the country.”

Boundary changes mean Mr Hunt is standing in the newly created Surrey seat, which would have had a Tory majority of 10,720 if it had been fought on those boundaries at the 2019 election.

The Liberal Democrats hope the seat could fall their way as part of their plan to target the “blue wall” of Conservative seats in the Home Counties.

But in a sign that the Tories are more concerned about their voters drifting to Reform UK, Mr Hunt echoed the Conservative message that supporting Nigel Farage’s party would end up handing Labour a landslide win by splitting the vote on the right.

Sir Ed Davey visits the Godalming and Ash constituency
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey visited a pub in the Godalming and Ash seat as part of the effort to oust Jeremy Hunt (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

He claimed that Sir Keir Starmer would turn the UK into “taxtopia”, restating Tory attacks on Labour’s plans for the economy and public finances.

“Taxtopia is what we will get under a Labour government,” he said.

“A vote for Reform will mean fewer centre-right MPs in Parliament, not more.

“It will give Keir Starmer an unchecked majority.

“He will have a free hand to help himself to your salary, to your pension, to the value of your house. All the things that Labour governments have always wanted to do.”

Labour has repeatedly said it has no plans to increase taxes beyond the specific measures set out in the party’s manifesto, such as imposing VAT on private schools and closing loopholes for non-domiciled wealthy foreigners.