
Kemi Badenoch plays down prospect of leadership coup after Tory reshuffle
The New Statesman reported that many Tory MPs who backed Mrs Badenoch in the leadership contest have privately turned on her, and believe her core team of advisers are 'lightweights and sycophants'.
It has been reported that Tory MPs who backed Kemi Badenoch to lead the Conservatives have turned on her (Lucy North/PA)
Faltering Conservatives may seek to trigger a vote of confidence in their leader in November, once a grace period protecting her from such a move ends, the magazine said.
The claims came to light a day after Mrs Badenoch reshuffled the senior Tory ranks, appointing former minister Sir James Cleverly as her shadow housing secretary.
Asked about suggestions that Tory MPs were already plotting a coup, Mrs Badenoch told the PA news agency: 'I would say that if nobody put their name to it, then I'm not paying any attention to it.
'People have been saying that about every single leader, and it's usually the same one or two people who say it about every single leader.'
Speaking during a visit to a housing development in north-west London alongside Sir James, Mrs Badenoch added: 'I've been elected to get the Conservative Party back on track, and I'm very focused on doing that.
'We lost to a historic defeat last year for many reasons, not least of all, house building, not doing as well as it could have done.'
Sir James Cleverly and Kemi Badenoch during a visit to a housing development in north-west London (Lucy North/PA)
The New Statesman said Mrs Badenoch had criticised her predecessor Rishi Sunak for making an early exit from D-Day commemorations in France during the 2024 general election campaign, and that she believed the gaffe was central to the party's loss.
The magazine also claimed to have seen a notebook containing her handwriting, which included affirming phrases like 'You are a serious person who does big things', and suggesting the Tory leader was 'the standard bearer of the right'.
Mrs Badenoch's team denied that she had lost any such notebook.
In his first full day in the job, shadow housing secretary Sir James accused the Prime Minister of being more interested in finding accommodation for asylum seekers than 'hard-working young people'.
He said he was 'furious' when the Prime Minister 'blithely' said there are 'plenty of houses' around the UK for asylum seekers.
Sir Keir Starmer insisted there was 'lots of housing available' to accommodate rising numbers of homeless people and asylum seekers when he was questioned by senior MPs earlier this week.
Sir James told Times Radio: 'I was furious, I genuinely couldn't believe he said this, when the Prime Minister was at the Liaison Committee and blithely said, 'Oh, there are plenty of houses around the UK for asylum seekers'.'
Sir James also said he understands the frustrations of local people when asked about demonstrations outside hotels believed to be housing asylum seekers.
There has been a series of protests outside the Bell Hotel in Epping, Essex, since an asylum seeker was charged with sexual assault.
Police officers escort a woman away from a demonstration outside the Bell Hotel in Epping (Yui Mok/PA)
His new role makes him the opposition counterpart to Angela Rayner in her housing, communities and local government brief, but not in her deputy prime minister post.
Ms Rayner said on Tuesday that immigration was among issues having a 'profound impact on society' as she updated the Cabinet on her work on social cohesion.
Sir James was also asked for his view on the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) after Mrs Badenoch launched a review and said she was 'increasingly of the view' that the UK should withdraw.
He would not say whether he agreed as he toured broadcast studios on Wednesday morning.
Mrs Badenoch told broadcasters: 'James and I have always had the same position on the ECHR, and that is that if we need to leave, then we should leave, but it's not a silver bullet.
'That is why we have a commission on this very issue, which will be reporting at party conference.
'So I wouldn't bring someone into the shadow cabinet if they didn't agree with me.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
29 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
If the SNP DON'T get a majority at Holyrood, they must end doomed Indyref obsession for ever
The fact that a majority in a parliament and a majority of the population calling for a referendum are two very different things seems lost on our First Minister BILL LECKIE If the SNP DON'T get a majority at Holyrood, they must end doomed Indyref obsession for ever Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) FULL-ON John's back yet again with his old broken record – the one about how Scotland really, really needs Independence. Why do we need it so badly? Well, if he has to explain it, we're clearly just not patriotic enough. 2 John Swinney is back with his old broken record Credit: PA All he's telling us right now is that it's mega-trega-important for the SNP to get a majority at next year's Holyrood elections so they can 'ensure' a second once-in-a-lifetime referendum. The fact that a majority in a parliament and a majority of the population calling for a referendum are two very different things seems lost on our First Minister, but let's not argue the toss while he's busy trying to get The Donald to realise he's not a wine waiter. No, for now, let's just put a deal on the table. Which says that if the Nats DON'T get the 65 seats they need for outright control come May, they shut up about their doomed obsession for ever. It rocks that we ALL have Ozzy's power to improve lives of others HIS legs wouldn't hold him up and his voice could barely carry a note. But even in the final throes of life, Ozzy Osbourne exuded enough power to light up his beloved Birmingham for a fortnight. We're talking REAL power here, not the sort that's bought and that corrupts, that steals in the name of fairness and kills in the name of peace. We're talking the power to help, to inspire, to connect, to educate, to spread limitless joy. It's just over three weeks since Ozzy took his last public bow. It's seven days since he passed away, aged 76 and racked by Parkinson's Disease. Inside Ozzy Osbourne's final days after historic last show 'took huge toll' on his health What he achieved in that final act of his, though, will live forever. The astounding £140million he raised for charity through his farewell gig will do good for so many across generations to come. What a way to leave the stage. What more could any of us ask when our own time is up? Think about it this way. Imagine if Putin or Netanyahu or Trump were to pass away tomorrow. What would their last contribution to society have been? Trying to obliterate a neighbour? Pulverising terrified hordes into submission and starvation and submission? Turning culture against culture and colour against colour? Letting basic public services crumble and rot? That's how too many of those to whom we GIVE power choose to waste it, how they choose to use it as a weapon. Not the man born John Michael Osbourne. He chose to use his as a magic wand with which to make fortunes appear in the bank accounts of those who need it more than most. He phones all his heavy metal mates — Metallica, Guns N' Roses, Slayer, you name them — and says he wants them to play at his last ever show. 2 Ozzy passed away last week aged 76 Credit: Getty Be an honour, pal, they chorus. He tells them they're not getting paid a bean. Not an issue, mate, they echo. Plus, they'll have to pay their own travel and hotel and hire their own gear. Sure, Oz, whatever you need. And by the way, you'll be putting your hands in your pockets for the cause, yeah? Goes without saying, legend. That's power. That's influence. That's respect. That's something the warmongers and the tariff-raisers and the plain old political hypocrites will never have, will never know. Maybe it's knowing how little they're truly respected that makes them so angry, so defensive, so weak — and, yes, your Putins and Netayanhus and Trumps ARE weak, because no one who possesses genuine strength needs to kill or rob or besiege to prove it. Look at the president of the United States of America, swanning around the golf course while Europe's leaders wait to tell him how his economic idiocy is bringing global business to its knees. Look at Israel's leader, unmoved by the poverty, the disease and the starvation taking hold right across the border from him, all caused by his refusal to admit when enough retribution is enough. Look at Russia's ruler, too stupidly proud to admit that the war he thought would be won in a week could grind on forever and gain him the square root of nyet. Each of them forgetting the most important thing about power: That with it comes responsibility. In his final days and weeks, Ozzy Osbourne could have acted the way they do. He could have yelled to the world about how unfair life was, settled old scores, maybe even just turned his face to the wall and waited for his last breath. Instead, he got on that phone, he pulled together one almighty wall of support and noise and energy, he sold 40,000 tickets for Villa Park, the football stadium along the road from his childhood home, he sold a deal that streamed his dream to close on six million more worldwide. It's our sworn duty to be on top TO news that would make Sir Big Yin himself yell: 'Jesus Suffering F***'. Glasgow is now second to ****ing Newcastle on the UK's swearing charts. Seriously. Official research says we're down to a p***-poor 11 Fs, Bs and Cs per 100 words, while on Tyneside they're hitting 14. And despite the fact that those no-coat-wearing b*w*a*s still can't match our 2023 record of 15 per 100, this is still no b***o*k**g use. I've genuinely always thought that Glaswegians were the best swearers on Earth. They do it naturally, almost like punctuation. There are words that in dialects can sound horribly harsh and offensive, but which when said here can come across as compliments. Then some scientist *an*ers come out with findings like these? Sorry, but as a fully-paid-up, 300 f***s a day man, I'm not ****ing well having it. So let's commit to sorting this s***show, to redressing the b***a*d**g balance. It's the duty – no, the SWORN duty – of everyone in our biggest city to go full-on Malcolm Tucker until our sweariosity is once more respected the way it ****ing well should be every ***h***u****g day of the week. From today, every knock at the door should be met with a cheery cry of: 'Come the **** in or **** the **** off!' From today, every friend should be greeted with a smile and the words: 'How's tricks, ya ****?' And, of course, from today every word with more than two syllables must automatically have a sweary word shoehorned into it. With abso-****ing-lutely no exceptions. Then he rose from a trapdoor on a leather wheelchair with skulls on its armrests, he grabbed a microphone and he rasped what few lyrics his throat could still form. He led his farewell gig from front and centre. He knew the crowd would be his voice. He knew his rock 'n' roll buddies wouldn't let him down. Most of all, he knew that when it was done, he could go back home and prepare for the end in peace, because the job had been a good 'un. That £140million, the most raised in a single day by a music event, will do untold good for his three chosen causes — Cure Parkinson's, Birmingham Children's Hospital and the Acorns hospice for terminally-ill kids — all from one afternoon and evening out of a very special man's life. As a spokesperson for Acorns said when news broke of his passing: 'On the night of the gig and ever since, thanks to Ozzy, our hospice has been embraced by people across the world. Families who so often can feel unseen have been celebrated by millions.' That, my friends, is power and how to use it. A power we ALL possess. Maybe we can't all phone Metallica and book them for our local community centre, but we can all do something to make others happier; a smile, a compliment, a phone call, a visit, a fundraising event. Each insignificant in isolation, but which come together to make the world a better place. That's all Ozzy was trying to do while he still had the chance. And it rocks.


Glasgow Times
29 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Funding golf tournament was not attempt to ‘butter up' Trump
The Government announced on Saturday that £180,000 of public money would be spent to bring the Nexo Championship to Scotland next month – just days before the First Minister met Mr Trump. Mr Swinney said he had 'courteous' talks with Mr Trump on Tuesday morning, ahead of the official opening of a second course in Aberdeenshire. The leaders discussed the situation in Gaza and tariffs on Scotch whisky, which Mr Swinney said the president appeared to be willing to move on. Speaking to the PA news agency, the First Minister said the tournament funding was not to curry favour with the president. Asked if it was an effort to 'butter up' Mr Trump, he said: 'No, I think what I was trying to do is to make sure that a tournament that was coming to Scotland could be properly promoted. 'It's coming here, we've essentially intervened to secure a tournament quite late in the day.' Mr Swinney added that the Government provides cash to the Royal and Ancient Golf Club (R&A) in St Andrews. 'If the principle is good enough for the R&A, it's good enough for Trump International,' he said. Asked about his relationship with Mr Trump following his first face-to-face meetings with the leader, Mr Swinney said there had been 'very good and courteous' conversations between the pair. 'I think we talked well about the issues that matter to the people of Scotland,' he said. Donald Trump was joined by his sons Donald Jnr, left, and Eric for the official opening of the New Course at Menie, Aberdeenshire (Jane Barlow/PA) 'He has a deep affinity with Scotland, so he's got a warmth and an empathy towards Scotland and he was interested in all the issues that I was raising about Scotland. 'So I think we had a very welcome opportunity to engage in dialogue and to build a relationship.' Asked if he believes that positive relationship will continue into the future, the First Minister said he does, adding the president ended the meeting by urging him to contact the US administration should he wish to raise any issues. 'I intend to take him up on that issue, because my job as First Minister of Scotland is to promote and protect the interests of the country and I can engage constructively with the president of the United States to do that,' Mr Swinney added. As well as a meeting early on Tuesday, the First Minister was also invited to a dinner on Monday evening at the Aberdeenshire club alongside Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer. Over a meal of langoustines and beef, the First Minister had his first face-to-face meeting with the US president – having spoken over the phone after his election win last November.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Funding golf tournament was not attempt to ‘butter up' Trump
Scottish Government funding for a golf tournament at Donald Trump's Aberdeenshire course was not an attempt to 'butter up' the US president, John Swinney has said. The Government announced on Saturday that £180,000 of public money would be spent to bring the Nexo Championship to Scotland next month – just days before the First Minister met Mr Trump. Mr Swinney said he had 'courteous' talks with Mr Trump on Tuesday morning, ahead of the official opening of a second course in Aberdeenshire. The leaders discussed the situation in Gaza and tariffs on Scotch whisky, which Mr Swinney said the president appeared to be willing to move on. Speaking to the PA news agency, the First Minister said the tournament funding was not to curry favour with the president. Asked if it was an effort to 'butter up' Mr Trump, he said: 'No, I think what I was trying to do is to make sure that a tournament that was coming to Scotland could be properly promoted. 'It's coming here, we've essentially intervened to secure a tournament quite late in the day.' Mr Swinney added that the Government provides cash to the Royal and Ancient Golf Club (R&A) in St Andrews. 'If the principle is good enough for the R&A, it's good enough for Trump International,' he said. Asked about his relationship with Mr Trump following his first face-to-face meetings with the leader, Mr Swinney said there had been 'very good and courteous' conversations between the pair. 'I think we talked well about the issues that matter to the people of Scotland,' he said. 'He has a deep affinity with Scotland, so he's got a warmth and an empathy towards Scotland and he was interested in all the issues that I was raising about Scotland. 'So I think we had a very welcome opportunity to engage in dialogue and to build a relationship.' Asked if he believes that positive relationship will continue into the future, the First Minister said he does, adding the president ended the meeting by urging him to contact the US administration should he wish to raise any issues. 'I intend to take him up on that issue, because my job as First Minister of Scotland is to promote and protect the interests of the country and I can engage constructively with the president of the United States to do that,' Mr Swinney added. As well as a meeting early on Tuesday, the First Minister was also invited to a dinner on Monday evening at the Aberdeenshire club alongside Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer. Over a meal of langoustines and beef, the First Minister had his first face-to-face meeting with the US president – having spoken over the phone after his election win last November.