
Kemi Badenoch ‘will not chase Farage to the Right'
Kemi Badenoch will not 'chase Reform to the right' despite suffering a historic defeat in Thursday's local elections, Conservative strategists have decided.
The Conservative leader will resist calls to match Nigel Farage's policies for fear of political collapse in the style of right-wing parties in Australia and Canada.
The decision comes amid rising disquiet from Badenoch's own MPs, who said she needed to set out a radical change of course within weeks to save her job.
On Saturday night, some were calling for a shadow cabinet reshuffle, with one senior MP going further still and suggesting that she should stand down for the good of the party.
Mr Farage rubbed salt in the wound today, writing in The Telegraph that the Tories 'will never recover' from their historic defeat at his hands.
But allies rowed in behind her leadership and urged their colleagues to show patience as splits emerged over how to respond to the election result.
Mrs Badenoch admitted that the Conservatives had suffered a 'bloodbath' in the elections, with anger over the party's record on immigration playing a key role. But it is understood she will resist calls to drastically change course.
A Conservative strategist told The Telegraph: 'This week we've seen some of the global right's biggest long-term hopes in Canada's Pierre Poilievre and Australia's Peter Dutton not just lose, but even lose their seats in the process.
'This shows the danger of chasing populist parties like Reform to the right. Kemi wants to ensure the Conservatives don't suffer the same fate by taking her time and basing the offer on principles, not what looks superficially popular.'
Mr Dutton, who leads the Right-wing Liberal Party of Australia, suffered an unexpected defeat at the hands of socialist Labor in Friday's election.
Canada's Conservatives, led by Mr Poilievre, surrendered a massive 27-point lead in the polls to lose last week's general election to the Liberals.
The party had long been seen as a shoo-in to form the next government, but was hit by a huge voter backlash against Donald Trump's trade tariffs.
A senior Tory spokesman said Mrs Badenoch was not 'underestimating the scale of the renewal required' and urged MPs not to descend into infighting.
'Kemi will show the same energy she has displayed in the local campaign - visiting every single county with elections at least once, and some more than three times - as she seeks to win back lost seats,' he said.
'The Tories knew these would be a tough set of results, but they have also shown the sheer scale of contempt for Starmer and this failing Labour Government.
'This is an opportunity the Conservatives now must not miss by turning in on ourselves.'
The spokesman said that the party's dire election results had 'woken up a lot of donors and supporters' to the electoral threat posed by Reform.
It is understood that the Tories have received more than £500,000 in new donations since Thursday, swelling their coffers at a critical time.
Mrs Badenoch is also expected to respond to the defeat at the hands of Reform with a series of new policy announcements over the coming weeks.
She will start this week by challenging Labour to strengthen up online safety laws, raising the minimum age of access for social media sites from 13 to 16.
The Tory leader is also readying an offensive on crime, amid expectations that Labour will announce it is scrapping shorter jail terms to free up prison space.
But support among a number of Conservative MPs was ebbing on Saturday, with some accusing her of failing to communicate a vision to voters.
Sir Edward Leigh, the Father of the House, said the Tories needed to take on Reform by being as 'tough' as Mr Farage on immigration and net zero.
He said: 'It must be obvious to everybody now that we've got to do what the people want and have policies on net zero and immigration which are just as tough as Reform.
'And sooner or later, before the election, we've got to have an electoral alliance with them, otherwise we'll let Labour in the game. I think they're the views of many Tory MPs.'
Sir Edward backed Mrs Badenoch to carry on, saying the party should concentrate on its policy offer and 'there's no point having endless leadership elections'.
But other Tory MPs said the local election results showed that she should resign.
'I think the leader needs to go, I think she's lost the plot. She's not good enough and I think the people around her aren't good enough either,' one said.
'There's no vision at the moment and there's no leadership. We've allowed a void to open up and Nigel Farage has been able to move into it.'
Another MP said that they and colleagues had been shocked by the scale of the party's losses on Thursday, which even took CCHQ by surprise.
They said: 'There's a very high expectation that on digesting this there will be a set of actions to deal with it. You'd expect her to do a pretty quick reshuffle.
'She's got to show she means business and is actually serious about turning this around pretty much straight away, because the plan isn't working.'
A Tory source said Reform 'keeps stealing our voters' and the leadership must act quickly 'to stem the bleed because we're just bleeding out'.
But others backed Mrs Badenoch and said that any plotting against her was wrong.
Lord Maude, a former chairman, said the party was 'a phoenix, not a dodo' and would rise from the ashes 'sooner than' people think under her leadership.
He said she must resist the 'siren voices' urging her to 'cosy up to Reform', saying it was unrealistic to expect voters to have forgiven the Tories so quickly.
'There is no substitute for showing ourselves to be once again considered, thoughtful, competent and principled,' he wrote in The Telegraph.
Another Tory MP said the party had suffered 'much more than a standard mid-term revolt' but said it was both main parties that were 'now in the last chance saloon'.
They added: 'It would be disastrous to oust Kemi now. The public needs to see we are able to be a team and work together in pursuit of shared values.'
Mr Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, has been touted by some MPs as a possible replacement but has publicly backed Mrs Badenoch's leadership.
Meanwhile, Mr Farage said there was 'now a widespread acceptance that Reform UK has supplanted the Conservatives as the real opposition to Labour'.
He said that 'we now live in a new political age' and 'the lesson for future elections is simple - if you vote Conservative, you will get Labour'.
'The party that I lead is expanding. As we march on, the Conservatives are in retreat. In my opinion, they will never recover,' he added.

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Glasgow Times
25 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Labour MPs push front bench for ‘crackdown' on ‘dodgy' vape and barber shops
Melanie Onn said she 'really must press' the Government for long-term action to tackle these shops, which MPs heard had links to tax evasion and money laundering, and Joe Powell said well-known London streets such as Portobello Road and Notting Hill Gate are 'blighted'. Business and trade minister Gareth Thomas told MPs that the National Economic Crime Centre (NECC) had visited almost 400 premises during a three-week operation in March, freezing several bank accounts. Mr Powell, the MP for Kensington and Bayswater, told the Commons: 'Small businesses across my constituency on our high streets from Earls Court Road to Queensway, Notting Hill Gate and Portobello Road are fed up of being blighted by candy shops, low-grade souvenir shops, Harry Potter shops and, yes, even barber shops, with accusations of VAT and business rates evasion, and even links to money laundering and serious organised crime.' He urged Mr Thomas to say 'what steps' the Government is taking 'to crack down on these operations and create a legitimate level playing field for our small businesses'. The minister replied: 'We've been working with colleagues in the Home Office and the National Crime Agency (NCA) to take action to crackdown on illegitimate businesses that threaten to undermine the legitimate ones that are on all of our high streets. 'In March, the NECC co-ordinated a three-week crackdown against barber shops and other cash-intensive businesses where there were concerns, visiting almost 400 premises, securing freezing orders over a series of bank accounts totalling more than £1 million.' In response, Ms Onn said: 'I really do need to press him because my constituents in Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes are equally as fed up as (Mr Powell) of seeing high streets dominated by dodgy vape shops, unlicensed barbers.' She said 'some of them are legitimate' but asked: 'Is he working closely with the Home Office to try and tackle this blight because I think we probably need a national strategy, not a three-week operation?' Mr Thomas said he recognised 'a concern up and down the country' and added the NCA and Home Office 'are seeking to take action against illegitimate business'. He said a Government commitment to bolster police forces with 13,000 extra officers and special constables, backed by an uplift to forces' 'spending power' of 2.3% per year unveiled in Wednesday's spending review, 'will help'. In a viral video, Conservative shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick claimed 'weird Turkish barber shops' were 'chipping away at society', along with fare evasion, when he caught passengers allegedly 'bumping' London Underground ticket barriers on camera. 'The state needs to reassert itself and go after lawbreakers,' he said. Sadiq Khan is driving a proud city into the ground. Lawbreaking is out of control. He's not acting. So, I did.👇 — Robert Jenrick (@RobertJenrick) May 29, 2025 Conservative MP Graham Stuart said that if a book which Labour MP for Central Ayrshire Alan Gemmell is writing were a 'political thriller about fighting for small business', then he was 'sure it features five heroes on the front bench opposite, doing everything they can to promote small business'. Ministers laughed and pointed at Tory MPs when Mr Stuart added: 'Readers will ask 'who is the villain of the piece?'' The Beverley and Holderness MP suggested the villain would be Rachel Reeves, 'the Chancellor of the Exchequer who is doing everything possible to undermine business – 276,000 people having lost work since the autumn statement'. He asked: 'When will the ministers, the heroes of this story, fight against the Chancellor who's getting so much so wrong?' Mr Thomas said: 'It's a little while since I've been called a hero by (Mr Stuart) but I'm glad that I've finally had some recognition from him in that regard. 'I don't think the Chancellor of the Exchequer is a villain at all. 'Indeed, I think the spending review that she announced yesterday will help to unlock investment in our high streets and in our small businesses up and down the country – the record investment in research and development, the record investment in infrastructure, and the additional capacity to the British Business Bank will help to unlock billions of pounds of new investment and many more job opportunities across the country.' Labour former minister Liam Byrne later called for 'a plan to cut industrial energy costs now'. The Commons Business and Trade Committee chairman said: 'As our committee pointed out on Friday, the success of the industrial strategy will depend on a plan to cut industrial energy costs now. 'When the industrial strategy is published, will the Secretary of State reassure us that there will be a plan to ensure that UK energy prices are internationally competitive?' Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds replied: 'The very significant increase in industrial energy prices under the terms of the last government are a significant issue for our competitiveness, and yes, that is something we're seeking to address.'


Spectator
31 minutes ago
- Spectator
Reform gains another councillor in blow for Scottish Tories
Dear oh dear. With just days to go until the Scottish Conservative conference, party leader Russell Findlay will have been hoping for a quiet news week. He has had no such luck however – at the eleventh hour, it transpires that yet another one of his Aberdeenshire councillors has defected to Reform UK. Lauren Knight has become the party's fifth representative on the council – and party officials insist that with the support of two independent councillors, they now have an official group. The tide is turning… Knight, who represents the ward of Huntly, Strathbogie and Howe of Alford, was previously a Tory party member. But her move to Reform comes as she feels her party 'has left her', with the Aberdeenshire councillor adding she 'feels let down by so many broken promises'. She went on: 'Scotland has been abandoned by the two party establishment, which continues to prioritise self interests and party politics over genuine change.' Ouch. And by choosing the timing she has done to jump ship, Knight has rubbed salt in Scottish Tory wounds ahead of the party's annual conference this weekend. She is the 10th councillor the party has lost to Reform since the end of last year, and her move comes as the party prepares to contest Scotland's mainstream political parties in next year's 2026 Holyrood election. Findlay has attacked the councillors who have turned their backs on him, blasting their decisions in the Press & Journal as 'opportunistic'. Reform UK's Thomas Kerr – formerly the Conservative group leader on Glasgow City Council – has hit back, remarking: 'Reform UK is delighted to be living rent-free in Russell Findlay's head.' The gloves are coming off… Today's development comes a week after the Hamilton by-election where, despite coming third, Reform UK took 26 per cent of the constituency vote – outperforming their place in the polls and coming just 500 votes behind the party of government, the SNP. Kerr insists the party is the 'fastest growing' in Scotland, telling the Spectator last month that the party has 10,500 members and claims to be close to overtaking Scottish Labour's numbers. Indeed the party even managed to recruit its first Labour defector last week, with Renfrewshire council's Jamie McGuire swapping in his red tie for teal. Will more defections come ahead of the finalisation of Reform UK's Holyrood selection list? Stay tuned…

Western Telegraph
31 minutes ago
- Western Telegraph
Labour MPs push front bench for ‘crackdown' on ‘dodgy' vape and barber shops
Melanie Onn said she 'really must press' the Government for long-term action to tackle these shops, which MPs heard had links to tax evasion and money laundering, and Joe Powell said well-known London streets such as Portobello Road and Notting Hill Gate are 'blighted'. Business and trade minister Gareth Thomas told MPs that the National Economic Crime Centre (NECC) had visited almost 400 premises during a three-week operation in March, freezing several bank accounts. Mr Powell, the MP for Kensington and Bayswater, told the Commons: 'Small businesses across my constituency on our high streets from Earls Court Road to Queensway, Notting Hill Gate and Portobello Road are fed up of being blighted by candy shops, low-grade souvenir shops, Harry Potter shops and, yes, even barber shops, with accusations of VAT and business rates evasion, and even links to money laundering and serious organised crime.' He urged Mr Thomas to say 'what steps' the Government is taking 'to crack down on these operations and create a legitimate level playing field for our small businesses'. The minister replied: 'We've been working with colleagues in the Home Office and the National Crime Agency (NCA) to take action to crackdown on illegitimate businesses that threaten to undermine the legitimate ones that are on all of our high streets. 'In March, the NECC co-ordinated a three-week crackdown against barber shops and other cash-intensive businesses where there were concerns, visiting almost 400 premises, securing freezing orders over a series of bank accounts totalling more than £1 million.' In response, Ms Onn said: 'I really do need to press him because my constituents in Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes are equally as fed up as (Mr Powell) of seeing high streets dominated by dodgy vape shops, unlicensed barbers.' She said 'some of them are legitimate' but asked: 'Is he working closely with the Home Office to try and tackle this blight because I think we probably need a national strategy, not a three-week operation?' Mr Thomas said he recognised 'a concern up and down the country' and added the NCA and Home Office 'are seeking to take action against illegitimate business'. He said a Government commitment to bolster police forces with 13,000 extra officers and special constables, backed by an uplift to forces' 'spending power' of 2.3% per year unveiled in Wednesday's spending review, 'will help'. In a viral video, Conservative shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick claimed 'weird Turkish barber shops' were 'chipping away at society', along with fare evasion, when he caught passengers allegedly 'bumping' London Underground ticket barriers on camera. 'The state needs to reassert itself and go after lawbreakers,' he said. Sadiq Khan is driving a proud city into the ground. Lawbreaking is out of control. He's not acting. So, I did.👇 — Robert Jenrick (@RobertJenrick) May 29, 2025 Conservative MP Graham Stuart said that if a book which Labour MP for Central Ayrshire Alan Gemmell is writing were a 'political thriller about fighting for small business', then he was 'sure it features five heroes on the front bench opposite, doing everything they can to promote small business'. Ministers laughed and pointed at Tory MPs when Mr Stuart added: 'Readers will ask 'who is the villain of the piece?'' The Beverley and Holderness MP suggested the villain would be Rachel Reeves, 'the Chancellor of the Exchequer who is doing everything possible to undermine business – 276,000 people having lost work since the autumn statement'. He asked: 'When will the ministers, the heroes of this story, fight against the Chancellor who's getting so much so wrong?' Mr Thomas said: 'It's a little while since I've been called a hero by (Mr Stuart) but I'm glad that I've finally had some recognition from him in that regard. 'I don't think the Chancellor of the Exchequer is a villain at all. 'Indeed, I think the spending review that she announced yesterday will help to unlock investment in our high streets and in our small businesses up and down the country – the record investment in research and development, the record investment in infrastructure, and the additional capacity to the British Business Bank will help to unlock billions of pounds of new investment and many more job opportunities across the country.' Labour former minister Liam Byrne later called for 'a plan to cut industrial energy costs now'. The Commons Business and Trade Committee chairman said: 'As our committee pointed out on Friday, the success of the industrial strategy will depend on a plan to cut industrial energy costs now. 'When the industrial strategy is published, will the Secretary of State reassure us that there will be a plan to ensure that UK energy prices are internationally competitive?' Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds replied: 'The very significant increase in industrial energy prices under the terms of the last government are a significant issue for our competitiveness, and yes, that is something we're seeking to address.'