Suella Braverman has given her backing to Liz Truss after her own exit from the Conservative leadership race.
The attorney general made it to the second round of the contest, but was knocked out earlier after receiving only 27 votes.
Now Ms Braverman believes the foreign secretary should be the next Tory leader and the country's prime minister, Sky News has confirmed.
Politics Hub: Sunak and Truss into final five as Mordaunt makes most gains
The five remaining hopefuls will progress to the third round on Monday next week, having received the following votes on Thursday:
There will be successive rounds of voting by Tory MPs until only two contenders remain.
Rishi Sunak and Penny Mordaunt maintained their places at the top end of the leaderboard in first and second spot respectively following the second ballot.
Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, who came in third, will hope to pick up votes from Ms Braverman's supporters in the next round.
Kemi Badenoch was fourth, with Tom Tugendhat in fifth place.
Tory backbencher Steve Baker, who ran Ms Braverman's campaign, told Sky News earlier that he would move his support to whoever she chose.
"I promised Suella I will vote the same way as Suella," he said. "Most of the team [will] wait for what Suella decides."
But our chief political correspondent Jon Craig said it was not guaranteed all 27 of the candidate's backers will follow suit, as some may rally behind Ms Badenoch.
In the first vote yesterday, former health secretary Jeremy Hunt and new chancellor Nadhim Zahawi were eliminated from the contest.
They both fell short of the 30 votes needed to move to the next round, with Mr Zahawi receiving 25 and Mr Hunt 18.
But while Mr Hunt gave his backing to the ex-chancellor, Mr Sunak, the current head of the Treasury has yet to pledge his allegiance.
The final stage is expected to be reached by the end of next week at the latest, leaving the final pair to carry out hustings over the summer and face a vote from the wider Tory party membership - with a result announced on 5 September.
Responding to the second round results, allies of Mr Tugendhat insisted he would not pull out of the Tory leadership contest despite dropping five votes since the first round.
Posting on social media, Mr Tugendhat wrote: "I have never turned down a challenge because the odds were against me. I don't plan to start now."
Reacting to receiving the most votes for a second time, Mr Sunak said he was "incredibly grateful" for the support of Tory MPs.
"I am prepared to give everything I have in service to our nation," he tweeted.
"Together we can restore trust, rebuild our economy and reunite the country."
Meanwhile, Ms Truss's leadership election team said "now is the time for MPs to unite behind the candidate who will cut taxes, deliver the real economic change we need, continue to deliver the benefits of Brexit and ensure Putin loses in Ukraine".
Ms Mordaunt tweeted out another thank you video to her supporters, saying: "Together we're going to make a real difference."
And Ms Badenoch said she was "delighted that a growing number of my colleagues have faith in my vision for a return to honest politics and conservative principles".
But Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said a general election is needed to ensure "fundamental change".
"I don't think the answer to the stagnation of the last 12 years is to change the candidate or the leader of the Tory party," he told reporters.
"We need much more fundamental change that, therefore, whoever emerges as the new leader of the Conservative Party is not going to be able to address the fundamental failure of the last 12 years.
"This is like a club that's sinking into relegation, desperately changing the manager. That is not the change that we need. We need to change the government, a fresh start for Britain, and that is what my Labour Party is able to offer."
The leadership contest was triggered after Boris Johnson announced his resignation last Thursday.
His announcement followed an avalanche of ministerial resignations over his handling of the disgraced MP Chris Pincher, and accusations he had lied about what he knew of the former deputy chief whip's inappropriate behaviour.
Mr Johnson remains in Number 10 as a caretaker prime minister while the contest is carried out.
But Labour has been pushing for the PM to go immediately, attempting to call a confidence vote in him and the government - with the potential of triggering a general election.
Instead, the government has called a confidence vote in itself, allowing it to set the wording to make it easier for Tory critics of Mr Johnson to vote in favour.
Sky News is hosting a live TV debate with the contenders vying to be the next leader of the Conservative Party and therefore prime minister, and you could be in the virtual audience.
The debate will take place on Tuesday 19 July at 8pm.
If you would like to be a member of the virtual audience and be in with a chance of asking a question, please email NewsDebates@sky.uk.
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiemh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L3N1ZWxsYS1icmF2ZXJtYW4ta25vY2tlZC1vdXQtb2YtY29uc2VydmF0aXZlLWxlYWRlcnNoaXAtcmFjZS1pbi1zZWNvbmQtcm91bmQtb2Ytdm90aW5nLTEyNjUxODc00gF-aHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL3N1ZWxsYS1icmF2ZXJtYW4ta25vY2tlZC1vdXQtb2YtY29uc2VydmF0aXZlLWxlYWRlcnNoaXAtcmFjZS1pbi1zZWNvbmQtcm91bmQtb2Ytdm90aW5nLTEyNjUxODc0?oc=5
2022-07-14 19:07:30Z
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