ConservativeHome was first edited by Tim Montgomerie, prior to the 2005 United Kingdom general election campaign.[5] In November 2008, Jonathan Isaby joined as a co-editor.[6] In 2009, Paul Goodman – the former Conservative MP for Wycombe – became the executive editor of ConservativeHome.[7]
In February 2013, Montgomerie announced that he would leave the site in April of the same year to become comment editor of The Times.[8] Goodman succeeded him as editor, and Mark Wallace joined the site as executive editor in May 2013. In January 2020 it was announced that Wallace would become the website's Chief Executive.
In 2022, Wallace became Chief Executive of Total Politics Group, owner of ConservativeHome, with Angus Parsad-Wyatt succeeding him as Chief Executive of ConservativeHome.
In 2024, following Paul Goodman's appointment to the House of Lords, Giles Dilnot was appointed editor of ConservativeHome.
ConservativeHome was critical of the A list and believed that former Conservative Party Leader David Cameron was in danger of alienating working class Conservative voters,[10][11][12] and pressed Cameron for specific pledges on tax cuts.[13]
It was credited with the most accurate record of MP affiliation during the 2005 Conservative Leadership election, and it also was the first to reveal the names on the "A-list" of candidates.[14][15] The Conservative chairman Francis Maude described it during the leadership election as "the only place to find out what's going on".[9]
"A Lefty Lexicon", a satirical article published in August 2006 on the site and written by Inigo Wilson, a man described as someone who "manages community affairs for a large telecoms company",[16] was criticised by the Muslim Public Affairs Committee UK (MPACUK).[citation needed] MPAC members discovered that Wilson was Community Affairs Manager for phone company Orange, and pressured the company to dismiss him. Wilson was initially suspended for the comments,[17] but later reinstated.[18]
The site previously ran a fortnightly podcast with Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg called "The Moggcast".[21]
Business
In September 2009 Lord Ashcroft, the then-Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party, took a controlling stake of 57.5% in PoliticsHome, the politically-neutral sister-site to ConservativeHome.[22] In 2011, Ashcroft sold PoliticsHome to Dod's Group, which he co-owns, and retained ConservativeHome.
In 2017, the website stated that it gets over two million unique visitors a year.[23]