<p>Backbencher Mark Harper became the 12th Conservative MP to enter the contest to replace British Prime Minister Theresa May, the Daily Telegraph reported Friday, as a shock poll highlighted the task facing her successor.</p>.<p>The former chief whip admitted he was an "underdog", but told the newspaper his low profile could work in his favour.</p>.<p>"We've seen basically the same faces saying the same things that they've been saying for the last three years," he said.</p>.<p>Brexit will dominate the battle to replace May, who was brought down by her failure to take Britain out of the European Union on March 29 as planned.</p>.<p>Former foreign secretary and pro-Brexit campaigner Boris Johnson is the hot favourite to take the top job, and is popular with grassroot party members.</p>.<p>But they will only get a vote after the Tory MPs whittle down the list -- currently 12 names long -- to a final two, and many are opposed to Johnson due to his pro-Brexit stance and gaffe-prone personality.</p>.<p>The Tories suffered humiliation during the recent European elections, receiving only nine percent of the vote as they bled support to the newly formed Brexit Party.</p>.<p>But the opposition Labour Party was also punished for its ambiguity over Brexit, coming in third place behind the stridently anti-Brexit Liberal Democrats.</p>.<p>The realignment of British politics away from the traditional two parties towards a more dispersed model reshaped by Brexit appears to be gathering momentum, according to a poll published in the Times.</p>.<p>The YouGov study found 24 percent of voters planned to vote for the Lib Dems at a general election, 22 percent for the Brexit Party and 19 percent for both the Tories and Labour.</p>
<p>Backbencher Mark Harper became the 12th Conservative MP to enter the contest to replace British Prime Minister Theresa May, the Daily Telegraph reported Friday, as a shock poll highlighted the task facing her successor.</p>.<p>The former chief whip admitted he was an "underdog", but told the newspaper his low profile could work in his favour.</p>.<p>"We've seen basically the same faces saying the same things that they've been saying for the last three years," he said.</p>.<p>Brexit will dominate the battle to replace May, who was brought down by her failure to take Britain out of the European Union on March 29 as planned.</p>.<p>Former foreign secretary and pro-Brexit campaigner Boris Johnson is the hot favourite to take the top job, and is popular with grassroot party members.</p>.<p>But they will only get a vote after the Tory MPs whittle down the list -- currently 12 names long -- to a final two, and many are opposed to Johnson due to his pro-Brexit stance and gaffe-prone personality.</p>.<p>The Tories suffered humiliation during the recent European elections, receiving only nine percent of the vote as they bled support to the newly formed Brexit Party.</p>.<p>But the opposition Labour Party was also punished for its ambiguity over Brexit, coming in third place behind the stridently anti-Brexit Liberal Democrats.</p>.<p>The realignment of British politics away from the traditional two parties towards a more dispersed model reshaped by Brexit appears to be gathering momentum, according to a poll published in the Times.</p>.<p>The YouGov study found 24 percent of voters planned to vote for the Lib Dems at a general election, 22 percent for the Brexit Party and 19 percent for both the Tories and Labour.</p>