Sir Mel Stride has issued a warning to any Conservative colleagues plotting leadership challenges, urging them not to risk derailing the party just as he says it is starting to get back on track.
On the eve of the party conference, the shadow chancellor has told The Independent that voters âwill never forgiveâ the Tories if they return to âself indulgentâ leadership contests again â less than a year after Kemi Badenoch was elected leader.
It comes after a dismal first year out of power for the party, which has continued to slip in the polls â despite Labourâs woes â while Nigel Farage and Reform UK have surged ahead and now sit as the most likely challengers to the government at the next election.
The Conservativesâ downfall has promoted speculation that Ms Badenoch could face a serious leadership challenge, with shadow cabinet colleagues Robert Jenrick and Sir James Cleverly tipped as the main contenders to replace her, but Sir Mel has insisted a change at the top now would be counterproductive.
âI think we’ve got to hold our nerve,â he said. âLook, nobody finds it comfortable to be where we are in the polls.
âNobody finds it comfortable to have lost the last election as decisively as we did and the difficulties we had in the more recent local elections. So I understand totally why people are uncomfortable with that, but what we’ve got to do is hold our nerve.

âWe’ve got a clear plan. There will be a lot more detail that will be coming out of conference very shortly. And the most important thing we can do now is preserve our unity and start to build back. And I think we are building back actually serving as an effective opposition.â
However, leading polling expert Sir John Curtice warned that the Tories were facing an âexistential crisisâ, while Mr Farage had made a âlot of progressâ with Reform.
Reform had âtaken the coalitionâ of voters that had led the party to government under Boris Johnsonâs leadership, he told the Independent, while the Tories had lost so much credibility that even those who voted for them in 2019 were as likely to see Reform as offering a competent government as the Conservatives.
He added that the lack of a âBoris figureâ in the party means any leadership challenge is pointless.
âWhere is the Boris figure sitting on the frontbench?â he asked.
âThe Tories were in deep trouble in the spring of 2019 as well, but then along came Boris. But where is the Boris figure for them now?â
But in a sign that Sir Mel plans to answer some of the partyâs critics regarding a lack of policy, he has pledged that he will be promoting âan unshackled economyâ with low pro-growth taxes.
He said: âI think we are beginning to get the message through that Labour are messing up the economy. The Reform Party are economic fantasists who will promise lots of things, including on the economy, without any serious plan as to how they’re going to deliver it, and in uncertain and very difficult economic times, it has fallen to the Conservative Party to be the grown ups in the room to set out a plan in which we clearly are living within our means.â

He fears that Labour may be leading the UK to a bond market crisis and business confidence is collapsing.
But he believes he has the solutions.
âWe’re under new leadership, and what Kemi and I recognize is we have got to get back to that kind of unshackled economy where taxes are leaning into growth and are lower, where we can look at our skills offering tackle the welfare bill.