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Jenrick’s ideas mostly ‘my thoughts repackaged’, says Badenoch – UK politics live | Politics


Badenoch claims Tory party close to going bust last year, and says Jenrick’s ideas mostly ‘my thoughts repackaged’

Kemi Badenoch has given a punchy interview to Tim Shipman from the Spectator ahead of the Tory conference. Here are the main lines.

I basically inherited a distressed asset and my first job was to just make sure we didn’t go bust. Most of my first three to six months were spent on that. I just couldn’t get out there much. The opportunity cost was perhaps not doing much media.

When it was put to her that she should have spent more time over the past year talking about policy, she said she would “rather be out raising every single penny”, not doing ‘some nice media interviews’. Asked why she couldn’t do both, she replied:

I don’t think people realise just how perilous the situation was.

  • She said that she will give two speeches at Tory conference – a speech on Sunday setting out the party’s plans to leave the European convention on human rights, as well as the traditional end-of-conference speech on Wednesday. That is similar to what Theresa May did in 2016, when she give a speech on the Sunday about her Brexit policy. (That was the speech where she in effect committed the UK to leaving the single market and the customs unions – despite the fact she had not cleared that with cabinet.) Badenoch is going to present the ECHR plans to her shadow cabinet tomorrow.

  • She claimed that most of Robert Jenrick’s ideas were hers. Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, was Badenoch’s main rival in the leadership contest last year. It is widely assumed that he is preparing to stand in another contest before the election, and he has a very active social media comment, where he is happy to comment on topics outside his brief. Asked if she was happy about Jenrick offering his views so readily, Badenoch said: ‘Yes. But most of them are my thoughts repackaged.” She also said:

I don’t mind that he says what he thinks. The advantage of having a leadership contest is that you’ve kind of already said what you think. Repeating it, which is what Rob tends to do, is not new information.

Badenoch is not being fair to her rival. In last year’s contest the most significant policy difference between Badenoch and Jenrick was Jenrick giving a firm commitment to withdraw from the ECHR, while Badenoch would not make that commitment. She did not rule out withdrawal, but said it was not a “silver bullet”. In Manchester next week at their conference the Tories will be adopting the Jenrick policy.

I think people should just speak freely, no matter what the consequences are. I don’t mind people straying a little bit off piste.

  • She said, when she spoke to Donald Trump at the state banquet, he told her: “I hear me and you agree on so many things.” In particular, he referred to her call from more oil and gas extraction from the North Sea.

Kemi Badenoch. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian
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Green leader Zack Polanski to use conference speech to call for wealth tax

Kemi Badenoch is not the only party leader previewing what she is likely to say at her party conference. (See 12.51pm.) The Green party conference starts tomorrow, and Zack Polanski, the new leader, has released an advance extract from his speech calling for a wealth tax.

According to the party, he will argue “the country’s housing crisis, crumbling NHS and rising bills are not accidents, but the result of a political system designed to protect the wealth of the top 1% at the expense of the 99%”.

Polanski will say:

Hairdressers and plumbers say, understandably, I’ve worked hard all my life. Why are you taxing me? Why are you taxing my ambition? We need to make sure that everyone in this country knows there will be people who go to sleep tonight and, without lifting a finger, will wake up richer, much richer.

They will make more money in one night than everyone in this room could make in an entire year. More than Bournemouth could make in an entire year. That’s why it’s difficult sometimes to picture. It’s obscene.

Not a tax on hairdressers. Plumbers. Or ambition. A tax on the assets of the 1% to reduce inequality and make sure that we all have a country everyone can afford to live in. A country with universal free childcare, with funding for SEND education, with rural bus routes and climate investment. It’s time for a party that’s bold enough to say, tax the rich.

At the last election the Greens were proposing a wealth tax levied at 1% annually on assets above £10m, and 2% on assets above £1bn.

Zack Polanski speaking at a rally last month. Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi/The Guardian
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