It's Day Two of the Tory leadership race and already things are getting personal.
Frontrunners are being blasted for their careless tax pledges while Michael Gove
With it's now the turn of the more B-list candidates who only have an outside chance of being PM.
They include the quirky Rory Stewart, who will launch his campaign with a rally this evening and
Here's everything you need to know as the race ploughs with full steam ahead.
You can also read our guide to all the candidates, the full timetable for the race, where the candidates stand on Brexit, and their policies on everything else.
1. The Tory 'B-team' launch their leadership campaigns today

Three more Tory leadership hopefuls make their pitches for No10 today - and they're definitely the B-team.
Former Commons leader Andrea Leadsom unveils her campaign at 9.30am with a promise to take action on the climate change "emergency".
Ex-Chief Whip Mark Harper - a 200/1 outsider - hopes to kickstart his unlikely tilt for Downing Street with his “Ask Me Anything” stunt.
And oddball candidate Rory Stewart, whose quirky videos have charmed Westminster and who claims he's the only man to beat Boris Johnson despite having 17 backers, will launch his campaign with a rally on London's South Bank.
Boris Johnson, who has now won the backing of a 92 Group hustings and ex-leader Iain Duncan Smith, will launch his campaign tomorrow, as will Sajid Javid.
Number two candidate Jeremy Hunt launched yesterday.
A two-day two-part hustings begins at 3pm today in Parliament and the first knockout round of voting by MPs is on Thursday. Anyone with 16 or fewer supporters will be booted out.
2. And things are getting personal

Michael Gove came out swinging at Tory rival Boris Johnson yesterday - as he desperately tried to resurrect his drug scandal-hit campaign.
The shamed minister launched his own bid for No 10 with a string of attacks on his former Leave campaign comrade-in-arms.
He insisted he was in the race “to win it” after being urged to step down by senior Tories after admitting taking cocaine.
And he goaded Mr Johnson over his decision to quit the contest last time round telling him “whatever you do, don’t pull out”.
He was later forced to deny that his comments were a dig at Mr Johnson’s well publicised series of extra-marital affairs.
Meanwhile Cabinet oddball Rory Stewart hit out at rivals, accusing them of racking up a series of "reckless" tax and spending pledges they would be unable to keep in office.
The International Development Secretary said the "eye-watering" cost of rivals' promises risked undermining the party's reputation for economic prudence.
It comes after Boris Johnson planned a massive hike to 40p tax threshold from £50,000 to £80,000.
In a swipe at Mr Johnson, fellow former Tory leader William Hague said that without a proper plan for dealing with Brexit , the next PM would head a "sandcastle administration" which would quickly crumble.
3. We now have 10 official candidates

The official Tory leadership candidates have been revealed after 10 MPs received the backing they needed to formally enter the competition.
Frontrunner Boris Johnson is joined on the ballot paper by Environment Secretary Michael Gove, Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and Home Secretary Sajid Javid.
Also going through are Health Secretary Matt Hancock, Mark Harper, Andrea Leadsom, Esther McVey, Dominic Raab and International Development Secretary Rory Stewart.
About a dozen MPs sat in a committee room in parliament to listen to the official announcement after the deadline for applications closed at 5pm.
Read the full list together with their proposers and seconders
4. But the only man backing a second referendum DIDN'T make the cut

Remain-backing Sam Gyimah pulled out minutes before the race officially began.
He said: "I have reached the conclusion that, having entered the race at such a late stage, there simply has not been enough time to build sufficient support, and I have decided to step back."
He was the only candidate backing a second referendum on Brexit. But he didn't get even the small total of eight MP backers that he needed.
Despite humiliation he came out fighting today, saying the contenders needed to explain their "plan B" if no Brexit deal could be secured.
The former minister said: "If Brussels doesn't budge, and Commons deadlock persists, what is the Brexit plan B?
"This is the critical question and with the clock running down to October 31, we need this question answered by every candidate now, as Brexit cannot be delivered without Parliament."
5. Meanwhile, Theresa May is desperate for a legacy - and she's struggling to get it

Theresa May's Cabinet meets as usual from 9.30am today - and the focus will be on the PM's legacy.
She is later giving a speech on her crackdown modern slavery, which she sees as a key part of her record.
But one source told the Mirror even the most basic attempts to get money from the Treasury to shore up her legacy are being blocked.
Chancellor Philip Hammond is not even letting money through to help push towards zero net carbon emissions by 2050, it is claimed.
One Cabinet aide told Playbook it will be "like the moment at Xmas where the elderly relative who doesn’t have long left just lets fly and tells everyone what they think of them, because they don’t give two f***s anymore."