Which Tory big beasts could lose their seats in the general election?

<span>Michael Portillo, right, after losing his seat to Labour’s Stephen Twigg, left, in 1997.</span><span>Photograph: Reuters</span>
Michael Portillo, right, after losing his seat to Labour’s Stephen Twigg, left, in 1997.Photograph: Reuters

The felling of Michael Portillo became a famous moment of the 1997 Labour landslide. This election could see a series of Tory big beasts lose their seats if the polls prove to be right. From a former leader to the current chancellor, these are the senior Conservatives at risk.

Iain Duncan Smith

Seat Chingford and Woodford Green
Majority in 2019 1,262
Challenger Labour

The former Tory leader’s majority has eroded over recent elections as the seat has become younger and more diverse. He may be helped by a Labour row which saw the party deselect its previous candidate, Faiza Shaheen. She is running as an independent, but it is unlikely to be enough to save Duncan Smith.
Risk factor: 4/5

Grant Shapps

Seat Welwyn Hatfield
Majority in 2019 10,955
Challenger Labour

The veteran cabinet minister has often been the safe pair of hands in media outings for Rishi Sunak, but his seat is now under threat from Starmer. What looked like a healthy majority of 11,000 in 2019 is at risk because of Labour’s resurgence in these suburban seats.
Risk factor: 3/5

Liam Fox

Seat North Somerset
Majority in 2019 17,536
Challenger Labour

The former defence secretary and prominent figure on the right would not have felt under threat from Labour in his rural constituency after the last election, where he enjoyed 53% of the vote. But if the polls are right, he too faces being swept away by the Labour tide.
Risk factor: 2/5

Mark Harper

Seat Forest of Dean
Majority in 2019 15,869
Challenger Labour

The transport secretary is one of Sunak’s most passionate supporters, but he too is in danger of losing his seat. While it was held by Labour under Tony Blair, it has been in Tory hands since Harper won it in 2005, having tried and failed to win it four years earlier.
Risk factor: 4/5

Alex Chalk

Seat Cheltenham
Majority in 2019 981
Challenger Lib Dems

The moderate justice secretary would have struggled even in a campaign that had gone well for the Tories. Given the Conservatives’ travails, he has little chance of retaining a seat in which the Lib Dems have always had a strong presence. They held it in 2010.
Risk factor: 5/5

Gillian Keegan

Seat Chichester
Majority in 2019 21,490
Challenger Lib Dems

The education secretary and queen of the punchy media interview is an unlikely inclusion on the “at risk” list, but she has been targeted in the Lib Dems’ almost-surgical campaign, going after seats where they are well-placed to win tactical votes. An extraordinary swing is projected here.
Risk factor: 3/5

Richard Holden

Seat Basildon and Billericay
Majority in 2019 20,412
Challenger Reform UK

The Conservative party chairman has won scorn from party insiders after installing himself in this supposedly safe seat after his own constituency in the north-east was abolished. There’s just one problem: Reform UK is now projected to give him a serious challenge in Essex.
Risk factor: 3/5

Mel Stride

Seat Central Devon
Majority in 2019 17,721
Challenger Labour

The work and pensions secretary was a key figure in the removal of Liz Truss and has provided regular backing for Sunak on the airwaves, but he now finds himself at the outer edges of the possible Labour surge. If it’s a really bad night, he could go.
Risk factor: 3/5

Penny Mordaunt

Seat Portsmouth North
Majority in 2019 15,780
Challenger Labour

Given how close she came last time, the Commons leader seems set to feature in an apparently imminent Tory leadership contest. First, she has the small matter of retaining her Portsmouth seat – another that last fell into Labour hands during Blair’s reign.
Risk factor: 3/5

Gavin Williamson

Seat Stone, Great Wyrley and Penkridge
Majority in 2019 New seat
Challenger Labour

The former chief whip, defence secretary and education secretary has caused controversy during his career in different cabinet jobs. He now faces an electoral battle in this new Staffordshire seat, largely made up of areas previously held by the Tories. Projected as a close call.
Risk factor: 3/5

James Cleverly

Seat Braintree
Majority in 2019 24,673
Challenger Labour

If the home secretary isn’t returned to parliament, it will have meant a complete meltdown for the Conservatives, probably leaving them below 100 seats. Yet some projections envisage defeat in this Essex stronghold, with most highlighting it as at least a close contest. Enough to have Cleverly sweating.
Risk factor: 1/5

Jeremy Hunt

Seat Godalming and Ash
Majority in 2019 New seat
Challenger Lib Dems

Hunt could make history on election night, by being the first ever serving chancellor to be unseated. To avoid that fate, he will have to see off a strong challenge from the Lib Dems, who are fighting hard in this corner of Surrey. It could be the election’s Portillo moment.
Risk factor: 4/5

Liz Truss

Seat South West Norfolk
Majority in 2019 26,195
Challenger Labour

The former prime minister is attempting to stick around in parliament. She couldn’t possibly lose such a big majority, could she? A sizeable Reform vote in the seat could imperil her, but while even some Conservatives may cheer a Labour victory here, most models suggest she will survive.
Risk factor: 2/5