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Badenoch ‘will get better', says Stride as Tories' polling woes continue
Badenoch ‘will get better', says Stride as Tories' polling woes continue

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • Politics
  • The Independent

Badenoch ‘will get better', says Stride as Tories' polling woes continue

Kemi Badenoch 'will get better', one of her senior shadow ministers has said as the Conservative leader continues to languish in the polls. Shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride insisted Mrs Badenoch is 'the person to lead us' as he answered questions following a speech on Thursday. He said: 'She will get better through time at the media, she will get better through time at the dispatch box at PMQs. 'Just as Margaret Thatcher when she became leader in 75 was often criticised for everything from her hair to the clothes she wore to the pitch of her voice to heaven knows what else – in the end she got it together and Kemi will do absolutely that.' Mrs Badenoch has faced a challenging time since taking over the Tory leadership last November. Her party continues to poll in third place behind Reform UK and Labour, with a YouGov poll published on Wednesday showing the Conservatives on 18%, just one point ahead of the Liberal Democrats. Mrs Badenoch's own favourability ratings have also fallen since she became party leader, reaching minus 27% according to a More in Common poll carried out last weekend. Meanwhile, former leadership contender Sir James Cleverly appeared to split from Mrs Badenoch on the environment in a speech on Wednesday evening, urging his party to reject climate change 'luddites' on the right who believe 'the way things are now is just fine'. The Conservative leader has described herself as a 'net zero sceptic' and launched her party's policy renewal process in March by arguing it is 'impossible' to reach net zero by 2050. In his remarks on Thursday, Sir Mel said Mrs Badenoch is 'leading a shadow cabinet that is united'. He added: 'Our party has not been united in that way for a very long time, and she is going to drive through the process – with me and others – so that we come to the right conclusion.' Sir Mel's remarks followed a speech in which he sought to distance the Conservatives from Lis Truss's mini-budget, saying the party needs to show 'contrition' to restore its economic credibility. In a furious response, Ms Truss accused Sir Mel of having 'kowtowed to the failed Treasury orthodoxy' and being 'set on undermining my plan for growth'. Calling for a 'bold rewiring' of the economy, Sir Mel argued both Conservative and Labour governments in recent decades had failed to secure economic growth and improve living standards. He went on to attack Labour and Reform UK, saying Chancellor Rachel Reeves is 'fiddling the figures' and basing all her spending on borrowing, while claiming Nigel Farage's economic plan 'doubles down on the 'magic money tree' we thought had been banished with Jeremy Corbyn'. In response, Labour accused Sir Mel of failing to properly apologise for the mini-budget. A party spokesman said: 'Kemi Badenoch has spent the last six months making billions of pounds of unfunded spending commitments and promoting Liz Truss's disastrous top team. 'The Tories inflicted mortgage misery and sky-high bills on working people. Their weasel words can't change that fact, and their unfunded plans show they will do it all over again. They haven't changed.'

Badenoch ‘will get better', says Stride as Tories' polling woes continue
Badenoch ‘will get better', says Stride as Tories' polling woes continue

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Badenoch ‘will get better', says Stride as Tories' polling woes continue

Kemi Badenoch 'will get better', one of her senior shadow ministers has said as the Conservative leader continues to languish in the polls. Shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride insisted Mrs Badenoch is 'the person to lead us' as he answered questions following a speech on Thursday. He said: 'She will get better through time at the media, she will get better through time at the dispatch box at PMQs. 'Just as Margaret Thatcher when she became leader in 75 was often criticised for everything from her hair to the clothes she wore to the pitch of her voice to heaven knows what else – in the end she got it together and Kemi will do absolutely that.' Mrs Badenoch has faced a challenging time since taking over the Tory leadership last November. Her party continues to poll in third place behind Reform UK and Labour, with a YouGov poll published on Wednesday showing the Conservatives on 18%, just one point ahead of the Liberal Democrats. Mrs Badenoch's own favourability ratings have also fallen since she became party leader, reaching minus 27% according to a More in Common poll carried out last weekend. Meanwhile, former leadership contender Sir James Cleverly appeared to split from Mrs Badenoch on the environment in a speech on Wednesday evening, urging his party to reject climate change 'luddites' on the right who believe 'the way things are now is just fine'. The Conservative leader has described herself as a 'net zero sceptic' and launched her party's policy renewal process in March by arguing it is 'impossible' to reach net zero by 2050. In his remarks on Thursday, Sir Mel said Mrs Badenoch is 'leading a shadow cabinet that is united'. He added: 'Our party has not been united in that way for a very long time, and she is going to drive through the process – with me and others – so that we come to the right conclusion.' Sir Mel's remarks followed a speech in which he sought to distance the Conservatives from Lis Truss's mini-budget, saying the party needs to show 'contrition' to restore its economic credibility. In a furious response, Ms Truss accused Sir Mel of having 'kowtowed to the failed Treasury orthodoxy' and being 'set on undermining my plan for growth'. Calling for a 'bold rewiring' of the economy, Sir Mel argued both Conservative and Labour governments in recent decades had failed to secure economic growth and improve living standards. He went on to attack Labour and Reform UK, saying Chancellor Rachel Reeves is 'fiddling the figures' and basing all her spending on borrowing, while claiming Nigel Farage's economic plan 'doubles down on the 'magic money tree' we thought had been banished with Jeremy Corbyn'. In response, Labour accused Sir Mel of failing to properly apologise for the mini-budget. A party spokesman said: 'Kemi Badenoch has spent the last six months making billions of pounds of unfunded spending commitments and promoting Liz Truss's disastrous top team. 'The Tories inflicted mortgage misery and sky-high bills on working people. Their weasel words can't change that fact, and their unfunded plans show they will do it all over again. They haven't changed.'

What James Cleverly gets wrong about net zero
What James Cleverly gets wrong about net zero

Spectator

time11 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Spectator

What James Cleverly gets wrong about net zero

The Conservatives were nearly wiped out at last July's general election, and the party is currently trailing Nigel Farage's Reform in the polls. You might think then that the handful of remaining 'big beasts' on the Tory benches would decide to try and work together. Instead, a split appears to be emerging in the party over net zero. James Cleverly took a thinly-veiled swipe at Kemi Badenoch's green policy in a speech to the Conservative Environment Network (CEN) last night. In one of her first major policy interventions as leader, Badenoch abandoned the Conservatives' support for the country reaching net zero emissions by 2050. But Cleverly has now argued that the party should not give up on the climate agenda. In his speech, he took aim at what he called 'neo-luddites' on the right who seem scared of using green technologies to protect the environment:

Cleverly splits from Kemi on climate
Cleverly splits from Kemi on climate

Spectator

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Spectator

Cleverly splits from Kemi on climate

Tree-hugging isn't just for the Greens, it seems – as former Tory leadership contender James Cleverly will insist this evening. At a London event tonight, the ex-Foreign Secretary will make the case that Conservatives should care about the climate and urge his colleagues to reject 'both the luddite Left and the luddite Right' on green policy. 'Conservative environmentalism doesn't mean a choice between growth and sustainability,' Cleverly will tell the Conservative Environment Network tonight in a dig at both the Labour government and Reform UK. The former Cabinet Secretary will speak this evening at the annual Sam Baker Memorial Lecture – where he will award Tory MP Andrew Griffith for championing the marine environment of Chagos. Cleverly will tell his audience that the country must 'push further, faster and smarter' on green tech, before going on:

James Cleverly should be allowed to speak about net zero
James Cleverly should be allowed to speak about net zero

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

James Cleverly should be allowed to speak about net zero

There will be a great wailing and a gnashing of teeth in parts of the Conservative Party tonight when former foreign secretary, former home secretary and former Tory leadership candidate James Cleverly takes the stage. Speaking at an event organised by the Conservative Environment Network, Cleverly will don the mantle of moderate conservatism and make the case for his party to embrace the drive towards net zero. This is a direct challenge to the party leader, Kemi Badenoch, who has been trying to woo Reform supporters back to the Tories by rejecting the Government's ambition to achieve a fully carbon-neutral UK by 2050. It's an act of political courage by Cleverly, who, had it not been for last-minute strategic shenanigans by his fellow MPs in the final round of voting in last year's leadership election, might now be sitting in the leader of the opposition's offices at Westminster. Cleverly already has a USP as a Tory politician: he sounds reasonable, down-to-earth and self-effacing, and was one of the party's more effective ministers in government. Taking a brave and principled stand in the face of public and party opinion doesn't necessarily make one right, however. But give Cleverly his due: no other MP has dared raise the standard for moderate conservatism since the party's well-deserved humiliation at the polls last year, despite its long and honourable tradition of centrism. It was only Margaret Thatcher's arrival as leader in 1975 that transformed the former 'one nation' Conservatives into a more radical, Right-wing, ideological and – for a time, at least – electorally dominant party. That moderate tradition, most recently and effectively represented by the former chancellor and three-times leadership contender, Ken Clarke, remains a serious and respected strand within the party. Without it, the Tories might as well rebrand themselves 'Reform' and invite Nigel Farage to take over as leader. The last Conservative leader of the opposition to succeed in becoming prime minister was that well-known 'green' Tory, husky-hugging David Cameron. True, he only won the keys to Number 10 with the help of the Liberal Democrats, but he also won 37 per cent of the electorate's support – significantly more than the victorious Labour Party won last year. Alas, I fear, for Cleverly, times are very different today. The Conservatives still need to be a broad coalition that includes the likes of Cleverly sitting alongside, not behind, Badenoch on the green benches. But the nation's focus has shifted in the last 15 years, hence the apparent advance of Farage and his party. In 2010 there was a degree of consensus across the main parties that the science of climate change was unarguable and that the outcome of elections would decide to what extent we might avoid global catastrophe. Cynicism has set in since then. People still believe the science, but have heard the increasingly dire warnings so often that they no longer believe there's much that mere mortals in Whitehall can do about it. There is certainly a much higher degree of scepticism in the UK about the wisdom of sacrificing personal income (in the shape of higher taxes), jobs and our standard of living in order to slow a chemical process that is largely being caused by much larger countries who are doing much less to prevent it. Even Tony Blair, the former Labour prime minister, has warned that net zero is 'doomed to fail' and that it was wrong that people were 'being asked to make financial sacrifices and changes in lifestyle when they know that their impact on global emissions is minimal'. Arguably, when Cleverly has deliberately chosen to ally himself with the Government's chief net zero evangelist, climate change secretary Ed Miliband, 'courageous' is understating the case. Still, Cleverly is a big beast in the political jungle of Westminster, and the Conservative Party, reduced to barely 120 Commons seats, can hardly afford to reject his counsel entirely. Voters are naturally suspicious of parties that confine themselves to a narrow bandwidth of political opinion – it restricts their ability to appeal to as broad a slice of the electorate as is necessary to win elections. Thatcher solved that problem by having the likes of Jim Prior and Ian Gilmour in her cabinet. Cameron did it by keeping colleagues such as Iain Duncan Smith and Liam Fox within his centrist embrace, as well as Ken Clarke himself. Strategically, I suspect Cleverly is wrong and Badenoch is right on net zero: public anger about domestic bill prices is real at a time when the government is making life ever more difficult and expensive for our domestic oil and gas industry. That is a political reality that would still exist even without challenge on the Conservatives' Right flank from Reform, and there seems little public appetite for more concessions by UK consumers to compensate for the inaction of the US, China and India. Some will criticise Cleverly for timing his intervention on the eve of the Hamilton by-election for the Scottish Parliament. I hate to break it to them, but not only were the Conservatives never in contention in this former Labour heartland seat, but they are nowhere near challenging for office at next year's Holyrood elections. The best the party was ever likely to do in tomorrow's contest was to trail in fourth place, behind the SNP, Reform and Labour. Cleverly's choice to delay his speech would not have changed that outcome. But the Braintree MP is an asset to the party and ought to be seen as one. He's wasted on the back benches. If his disagreement with his leadership over net zero cannot be navigated and accommodated, the Conservative Party is in an even worse condition than I thought. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

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