Four cabinet ministers have urged fellow Conservatives to back Prime Minister Liz Truss after a week of open disagreements within the party.
They warn that the party must unite, otherwise it risks falling into opposition.
Home Secretary Suella Braverman and Commons leader Penny Mordaunt are among those who have written opinion articles in the Sunday newspapers.
It comes after a reversal of plans to scrap the upper tax band overshadowed the start of the Tory conference.
Disagreements also arose over calls for benefits to be increased in line with inflation.
Ms Braverman and Ms Mordaunt were both in the Tory leadership race against Ms Truss.
Another leadership rival, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Nadhim Zahawi, also wrote an article – along with Environment Minister Ranil Jayawardena.
Meanwhile, senior Tory volunteers have written an open letter to the Sunday Telegraph warning MPs to “stop the fighting, unite behind the Prime Minister and focus on working for this country and building it with.” of the Labor Party”.
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Echoing the 2015 campaign, both Ms Braverman and Mr Zahawi propose that any future Labor government would be backed by the SNP.
Ms Braverman is said to have expressed an opinion this week that is at odds with the government’s immigration policy.
But she uses her Sun On Sunday article to warn of “divisions and consequences” in the Conservative Party, while declaring that she and the Prime Minister are working together on immigration.
“Those who are working with Labor to undermine our Prime Minister are really jeopardizing the Conservatives’ chance of winning the next election,” she writes.
“So the choice for my colleagues and for us is simple: Liz back or Keir Starmer, hand in hand with Nicola Sturgeon.”
In his article for the Mail On Sunday, Mr Zahawi concedes that the government did not get the “whole package right” when it came to its economic growth plan.
But he says “now is the time” for the Tories to rally behind Mrs Truss, adding his Conservatives need to keep their nerve.
The Cabinet Secretary adds that Tory MPs should support their leader and not “work against her” as he warned “division will only lead to drift, delay and defeat”.
Ms Mordaunt, who expressed support for increasing benefits in line with inflation despite the government’s lack of a commitment, also warns against partisan fighting.
“Division will only play into the hands of those who would lead our country in the wrong direction,” she writes in the Sunday Telegraph, adding, “we must unite and fight behind the prime minister.”
Mr Jayawardena’s article for the Sunday Express echoes this message, saying colleagues need to ‘get behind the Mrs Truss’ and ‘deliver, deliver, deliver’.
BBC political correspondent Ian Watson says No 10 is keen to quash any talk of rebellion among the Conservatives as MPs return to Westminster this week after the caucus season.
But he says despite coordinated messages from Cabinet ministers, Ms Truss’ internal critics may interpret the need for such explicit statements of support as a sign of vulnerability.
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