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Monday November 04, 2024

Kemi Badenoch to replace Rishi Sunak as leader of UK's Conservative Party

Ex-minister vows to return to "authentic conservatism" amid challenges in regaining party's position in UK politics

By Reuters
November 03, 2024
Kemi Badenoch smiles on the day she was announced as the new leader of Britains Conservative Party, in London, Britain, November 2, 2024. — Reuters
Kemi Badenoch smiles on the day she was announced as the new leader of Britain's Conservative Party, in London, Britain, November 2, 2024. — Reuters

Kemi Badenoch is set to replace former prime minister Rishi Sunak as the new  leader of the United Kingdom's Conservative Party after she won the election for the post on Saturday.

Badenoch, the former minister for women and equalities, proved victorious over her fellow Conservative and former immigration minister Robert Jenrick, Reuters reported.

Badenoch, 44, is now set to lead the party that lost the latest election to the Labour Party after 14 years in power.

The former minister, who is known for her straight-talking style, aims to reintroduce a combative right-wing tone to the party leadership, pledging to return to "authentic conservatism" as the party faces challenges in regaining its position in British politics.

Who is Kemi Badenoch?

Britain's first Black woman leader of a major political party, Badenoch is certain to shake up the Conservatives who suffered their worst election defeat in July under Sunak.

In her sights is not just the left-leaning Labour government but also the right-wing populist Reform UK party led by veteran Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage, whose appeal drew traditional Conservative voters to his cause in July's election.

But the anticipated swing to the right under Badenoch could alienate the more moderate wing of the party and some voters who were won over by the centrist Liberal Democrats at the election, when Labour won a landslide victory.

"So here is what we are going to do. We are going to rewrite the rules of the game," she told the Conservative Party's annual conference in Birmingham earlier this year.

"Some people say I like a fight. I can't imagine where they got that idea. But it's not true, I do not like to fight but I'm not afraid to fight," she said, pledging to go into combat against "left-wing nonsense" and for Conservative ideals.

Some critics say she is light on policy, but she says this is moot at a time when the Conservative Party is out of power.

She called her leadership campaign "Renewal 2030" rather than using her name, a sign she believes the party needs time to recover to win power. The next election is due in 2029.

First elected in 2017 for Saffron Walden in southeast England, Badenoch was appointed trade minister in 2022, a rapid rise marked by a number of clashes with the media, celebrities and her own officials but also a surge in support in the then Conservative government who admired her no-nonsense approach.

Born in London and raised in Nigeria until 16 by her Nigerian father and mother, Badenoch says growing up in a place where "fear was everywhere" made her appreciate the safety of Britain and become a true defender of Conservative principles such as "free speech, free enterprise and free markets".

She says the administrations of former prime ministers such as Sunak and Boris Johnson gave up those principles in favour of an approach that meant the party "spoke right and governed left", handing votes to other parties.

She credits her father, a doctor who died in 2022, for teaching her to not be "afraid to do the right thing no matter what people said".