SENIOR Tories have lined up behind Theresa May's leadership bid as rival Michael Gove prepared to set out his case for becoming prime minister.

Cabinet colleagues Michael Fallon and Patrick McLoughlin declared their backing for the Home Secretary's campaign as the candidates to replace David Cameron as Tory leader and premier jostled for support.

Justice Secretary Mr Gove will set out his case for the leadership in a speech on Friday after his last-minute decision to enter the race effectively torpedoed Brexit campaign ally Boris Johnson's hopes of entering Number 10.

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Setting out his support for the Home Secretary, Mr Fallon said: "As Defence Secretary, I've worked closely with Theresa on security and she is the right person to steer Britain through the serious challenges we now face.

"Theresa is the best person to lead our exit from the EU so that we reduce immigration and regain sovereignty while protecting our hard won economic growth.

"She has the track record, the temperament and the commitment to unite both the party and the country behind a clear plan for our future."

Transport Secretary Mr McLoughlin, writing in The Sun, said Mrs May would be able to do the required deals in Brussels as the UK negotiated its exit from the European Union.

Suggesting Mrs May had "the 'it' factor", he said: "We know that the next prime minister needs to forge a deal from the EU as we shape our brighter future in the rest of the world. And her track record shows that when Theresa arrives in Brussels, Europe's bosses sit up and listen."

Cabinet Office minister Matt Hancock pledged his support to Mrs May, telling BBC Two's Newsnight: "I think we need somebody with a steady hand on the tiller who has got proven leadership credentials."

Mr Johnson's shock decision not to stand catapulted Mrs May into pole position, with MrGove positioning himself as the leading Brexiteer in a field of five contenders also including Work and Pensions Secretary Stephen Crabb, energy minister Andrea Leadsom and former defence secretary Liam Fox.

Mr Gove will set out further details of his plans for the premiership in a speech in Westminster on Friday.

He revealed he decided to run late on Wednesday night after coming to the conclusion that fellow Vote Leave campaigner Mr Johnson could not provide the unity or the leadership to take Britain out of the European Union.

Mr Gove said: "In the last four days I had a chance to see up close and personal how Boris dealt with some of the decisions we needed to make in order to take this country forward.

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"During that period I had hoped that Boris would rise to the occasion because inevitably when you have a leadership election, people are tested, questions are asked of them, tests are set.

"Boris has formidable qualities but I saw him seek to meet and not pass those tests. I also thought ultimately, can I recommend to my friends that this person is right to be prime minister?"

Mr Gove has repeatedly denied having leadership ambitions in the past and his late intervention in the race drew criticism from supporters of Mr Johnson.

MP Kwasi Kwarteng, who has now switched to back Mrs May, accused the Justice Secretary of indulging in "student politics" while Jake Berry said: "There is a very deep pit reserved in hell for such as he."

Mrs May also won the support of the Daily Mail newspaper and appeared to have taken an early lead in the crucial race to win the allegiance of MPs to secure her place on the shortlist of two that will be voted on by party members.

Ms Leadsom refused to comment on whether she thought Mr Gove had decided to run after growing concerned Mr Johnson would renege on policies because he failed to give her an assurance of a top job under his leadership.

She told ITV's Good Morning Britain: "In the end I felt it was better to put my own name forward, because you do need a choice of candidates and it seemed to me that we might end up with only one candidate who had actually supported the Leave campaign.

"I was thinking about it all the way through, but I was also thinking about what is in the interests of the country, because to me the clear priority is to deliver on the referendum. We have been given an instruction, we now have to get a grip and get on with it."

Ms Leadsom reiterated her belief that the new prime minister has to be a Brexiteer, saying "it has to be someone who really believes that the UK will be better off once we leave the EU".

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Asked about the prospects of Mrs May, who backed Remain, Ms Leadsom described her as a "totally brilliant home secretary" who is "absolutely up to the job" of prime minister.

But she refused to comment on whether she would take a job in a Cabinet run by Mrs May, saying: "We are a long way off that at the moment. I am in it to be the prime minister."