13:00 GMT

Kuenssberg asks: Has Farage offered you a job?
“No,” Jenrick says.
Kuenssberg then asks “what job would you like?” to which Jenrick says: “I’m just here to help [Farage] to succeed.”
Jenrick says if he can play a “small part” in ensuring a Reform government, that will outweigh the “personal pain and difficulties of the last few days”.
But you used to say voting for Reform would split the vote on the right and guarantee a Labour victory, Kuenssberg says. “This is uniting the right,” Jenrick responds.
Challenged over whether it was opportunistic to join a party that is ahead in the polls, Jenrick says that is not why he did it.
He says he was the “bookies’ favourite” to be the next Tory leader before he defected. He “said no to all of that” to join Reform. “You don’t do that if you’re motivated by personal ambition.”
For her final question, Kuenssberg asks if Jenrick has been watching The Traitors.
He smiles: “I’ve been a bit busy recently, but I did watch the celebrity edition.”
People might think you were a traitor, not a faithful, Kuenssberg says.
Jenrick says in the future, people will look back on this moment as a time “when the right united”, and when “people put aside party loyalties and came together to fix our country”.
And with that, the interview is over. Stay with us as we bring you the latest reaction, as well as analysis from our team of correspondents