Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt will make their pitch to be the next prime minister to Conservative Party members in Northern Ireland on Tuesday.
The two candidates for the Tory leadership have been taking part in a series of party events across the UK.
Northern Ireland Conservative members will get a chance to ask questions of both men during the event in Belfast.
Brexit and the border are expected to dominate proceedings.
- How the PM hopefuls view Brexit and the Irish border
- Tory leadership: Compare the candidates
- Who chooses the next PM?
- Hunt sets 30 September ‘no-deal deadline’
- Boris Johnson backtracks over Scottish funding
Activists are also likely to raise the party’s relationship with the DUP and how the candidates view Northern Ireland’s place in the UK.
The Conservative Party’s 160,000 members will begin voting next week and Theresa May’s successor is expected to be announced on 23 July.
There are about 500 members in Northern Ireland
Mr Hunt has said he would decide by the end of September whether there is a “realistic chance” of reaching a new Brexit deal with the EU.
He said he would deliver a provisional “no-deal Brexit budget” in early September and then give the EU three weeks.
He has said he believes there is a technological solution “there now” to provide a solution to the border issue.
Mr Hunt has told Sky News that German Chancellor Angela Merkel is willing to look at any new proposals put forward by the next prime minister.
Mr Johnson has vowed to leave the EU “come what may” by 31 October.
Speaking to reporters on Monday, Mr Johnson said it was important to have a “hard deadline” for leaving, adding that previous no-deal preparations had “sagged back down” after exit dates were not met.
The candidates are set to face each other in an ITV debate on 9 July and at an event hosted by the Sun newspaper and talkRADIO on 15 July.
Mr Hunt tweeted on Tuesday that he had been invited to a live BBC TV debate against Mr Johnson on 16 July.
He argued though, that about 90% of Conservative members would have already voted in the leadership race by then.
Mr Hunt has told Sky News that German Chancellor Angela Merkel is willing to look at any new proposals put forward by the next prime minister.
Mr Johnson has vowed to leave the EU “come what may” by 31 October.
Meanwhile, former party leader William Hague, who served as leader of the opposition between 1997 and 2001, wrote in the Daily Telegraph that both candidates had “great merits”, but added that he believed Mr Hunt would make the better prime minister.
source:bbc