Boris Johnson resignation: Zahawi and Shapps enter Tory leadership race
Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi and Transport Secretary Grant Shapps have announced they are standing for the Conservative Party leadership.
Mr Shapps told the Sunday Times he was ruling out a general election if he was successful in becoming prime minister.
Mr Zahawi has said he will lower taxes, boost defence spending, and continue with education reforms he began while education secretary.
Earlier, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said he would not run.
In a statement on Twitter, Mr Wallace said his focus is on his current job and "keeping this great country safe".
The cabinet ministers join former Chancellor Rishi Sunak, Attorney General Suella Braverman, former equalities minister Kemi Badenoch and chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee Tom Tugendhat in launching campaigns to take over from Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
If he wins the contest, Mr Shapps pledged to produce an emergency budget, instruct his chancellor to cut personal tax for the poorest people and give state support to businesses with high levels of energy consumption.
He was one of the senior cabinet ministers who did not resign amid a chaotic week in Westminster which led to Mr Johnson's resignation.
Appearing to criticise colleagues who did, he told the paper he had "not spent the last few turbulent years plotting or briefing against the prime minister" or organisation a leadership campaign in the background.
He
told the paper: I tell you this: for all his flaws - and who is not flawed? - I like Boris Johnson. I have never, for a moment, doubted his love of this country."
The chancellor and transport secretary both launch bids to replace Boris Johnson as prime minister.
www.bbc.co.uk