It's quite complicated I think. Alicia Kearns (born 1987) seems very moderate overall and a staunch defender of trans rights and has voiced concern for Palestinians and has provided proper scrutiny of David Cameron. Then you've got Laura Trott (born 1984) who was a Cameron advisor but then has migrated to the right in search of promotion. Andrew Bowie (born 1987) is similar.
There are some very right wing younger MPs though yes like Jonathan Gullis (born 1991) who was a teacher?!, Tom Pursglove (born 1988), Dehenna Davison (born 1993), Scott Benton (born 1987) etc.
Also Robert Largan (born 1987) seems quite right wing to me even if he is not a 'headbanger' exactly like the others and is an ultra tribal Tory supporter and appears to really dislike local Labour and Green party activists.
Perhaps true; the ones you mention are quite obscure whereas the likes of Braverman, Badenoch, Gullis and Benton (those four were the ones I had in mind in particular) are rarely far from the news.
Christian Wakeford is of course a counter-example, so much so that he isn't even a Tory anymore.
I'd heard of Largan as High Peak was one of those ultra-marginal seats being discussed last time; looks a bit like Conor Burns physically, if I remember right.
Majority of 590, which means it's surely going to switch back next time. He isn't doing the chicken run, though.
Given High Peak was also Tory before 2010 and between 2010-17, that suggests that it's, if anything, trending leftwards with only the "Boris effect" returning it - just - to the Tories last time.
Can't blame her for wanting to retire, especially with the endless attacks from the labour party supporters (aka the nasty party). Afterall being a MP has long hours, especially over summer time when some visit various village summer fairs.
May had plenty of attacks from her own party, of course.
And it wasn't Labour who forced her to resign as PM. That was very much an inside job, driven by the Brexit fundamentalists and the blind ambition of Johnson. I suspect May and Labour could have come to a reasonable agreement had the ERG lot not constantly stuck their oar in, in an effort to get their man Boris installed as PM.
It's pretty obvious to me who "the nasty party" are, at least since 2019, and it ain't Labour.