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Kemi must turn Britain’s vice into virtue She needs to win back voters from Left and Right

Kemi has gumption and wit. (Credit: Rasid Necati Aslim/Anadolu via Getty)

Kemi has gumption and wit. (Credit: Rasid Necati Aslim/Anadolu via Getty)


November 27, 2024   8 mins

In her first month as leader of the Conservative Party, Kemi Badenoch has got off to an opportune start. Ignore all the headline-grabbing chatter about her unpopularity, the latest YouGov survey reveals that she has opened a viable route to power. Whether she seizes or squanders it, we will soon discover.

Having inherited a party that has haemorrhaged voters to the Liberal Democrats on the Left, and Reform on the Right, and collapsed among the under-25s, Badenoch’s core challenge is to win them back. Ingeniously, despite facing an utterly unrepresentative electorate of die-hard Tories, she has won the leadership contest without committing herself to a specific programme that would further alienate these three groups. She now needs to craft a strategy that attracts them back.

Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves have made this far easier than it ought to be. Their series of missteps continues, not only with Starmer’s active support for the Harris campaign making relations with our crucial ally more difficult than necessary. Closer to home, Labour has presented its opponents with more voter-sensitive gift-horses as the economy nose-dives into stagflation. Advancing the EV-only policy to 2030 from the EU-aligned 2035, and the prospective Trump date of Never, ranks the priorities of young metropolitans over the job losses that will be inflicted on the Northern working class — not to mention or the 1,300 workers just gone from Vauxhall vans. It’s no wonder that an astonishing 31% of Labour voters already rate Starmer “unfavourably”. Having won a huge parliamentary majority on only 32% of the vote, many of his new MPs are sitting on tiny majorities destined for defeat in 2029. But whether the beneficiaries are the Liberal Democrats, the Greens, Reform, the SNP, or the Tories, depends heavily on Kemi Badenoch. As Leader of the Opposition, she is in pole position both to grab media attention, and to set out a credible alternative to the managed decline embodied by Labour.

As an immigrant from Nigeria at its most dysfunctional, Badenoch sees Britain as a haven of order. She has already offered her immigrant’s perspective on the virtues and flaws of British society to good effect. In interviews, when asked about her moral values, she describes herself as “an agnostic who is culturally Christian”. Would any current Labour politician dare to make such a remark? To understand its full significance, I found myself re-reading Larry Siedentop’s Inventing the Individual, a landmark book in political philosophy. It traces the early Christian origins of the ideas and institutions on which our distinctive notion of rights and duties in European and North American societies still rests.

The Nigeria that the young Badenoch left in 1996 lacked common national values, being riven by bitter divisions. Its north was largely an Islamic culture recognising a duty of submission to authority; its south was predominantly Christian fundamentalist; and around the country there were pockets of deference to pre-colonial kingship. Enabled by this lack of common moral foundations, a corrupt military dictator thrived, rewarding loyalty with commercial privileges.

Badenoch recognised that the Britain of 1996 was far more functional than the society she had left behind and was astonished to find her fellow students here denigrating it. They were taking for granted an inheritance that she realised must have been built by centuries of struggle and could easily be eroded. While such ideas have become deeply unfashionable within the liberal establishment on both sides of the Atlantic, the liberals are in the minority — as Kamala Harris disastrously discovered. Badenoch may have the same skin colour as Harris, but her political philosophy and backstory edge closer to that of the Vice-President-Elect J.D. Vance. As a black immigrant, she can craft a credible and ethical Britain First agenda without taints of racism or imperialism.

“As a black immigrant, she can craft a credible and ethical Britain First agenda without taints of racism or imperialism.”

Badenoch needs to start, though, by getting rid of the greedy stench of the Liz Truss package that still cloaks the party: the tax-cutting for the rich and public-service cutting for everyone else. This was widely recognised as morally repellent, alienating the many Conservative voters who fled to the Liberal Democrats. The worst news for Badenoch, according to YouGov, is that 59% of Liberal Democrat voters view her unfavourably, compared to only 13% favourably. She needs to use some of that hard-won flexibility to apologise for that greed-agenda and decisively renounce it. She must renounce, too, the financier vision of Singapore-on-Thames: such a programme would gift high-earners in the City and Canary Wharf rates of taxation comparable to the low level of Singapore. It’s an image that alienated many Tories. It dismissed the Britains beyond the Thames bubble — and sure enough, it was beyond the Thames that most Tory seats were lost. Many of those lost to the Liberal Democrats live in towns in the southwest; those lost in the Red Wall are on the east and west coasts. Here, there is further bad news for Badenoch: she is seen as Metropolitan — 23% of Londoners are favourable to her compared to only 18% of Northerners. It’s early days, but I have not detected any signs of this yet in her messaging.

With such negative ratings among Liberal Democrat voters, she should start by courting them. Historically, the NHS has been key to this cohort: David Cameron won the Tory leadership in 2007 by bolding stating that he was in politics to support the NHS — even during the ensuing austerity, the NHS’s budget was fully protected. Although Reeves has announced a huge increase in spending for the NHS, this will be a shocking waste of billions if it doesn’t come with reform. Gwyn Bevan’s How did Britain Come to This? sets out the coruscating evidence of how, over decades, the Treasury has repeatedly and grossly mismanaged the health sector. Powers and budgets should be torn from its incompetent maws and localised. But while she can gleefully use Bevan’s evidence to embarrass Starmer, the recent Tory record on health is so bad that I cannot see her outcompeting Ed Davey.

So what else could she do which would appeal to good-hearted Liberal Democrats, but also to the alienated voters of the Red Wall? She can prioritise healing the rift inherent in the two-tier country and the resulting “huge and persistent inequalities” which are such a block on growth. There was a flashpoint in Red Wall areas over the summer which perfectly illustrated the attitude of the Government to our divided country and pinpointed an opportunity for Badenoch: the riots.

What triggered this sudden outpouring of furious dissatisfaction? We can trace it back to Boris Johnson’s bragging incompetence that with Brexit we could “have our cake and eat it”; this ensured that the European Commission would not cooperate with continuing the Dublin Principle, which enabled us to return asylum seekers coming from mainland Europe. This casual disregard for the consequences of increasing immigration was compounded by a Whitehall decision to house these incomers in four-star hotels. Hell bent on value for money, the Treasury minimised the cost by choosing hotels in the poorest provincial towns. This penny-pinching reduced the cost per asylum seeker to the still staggering figure of £41,000.

These towns, though, were at the heart of the empty Tory promise to “Level Up”. The Treasury hated the programme and had released only £400 million for it — that’s a measly £8 per person in provincial Britain, barely enough to give the High Street a lick of paint. The contrast between this insulting parsimony and largesse to the asylum-seekers housed in the same towns was explosive. Inevitably, the powder-keg of resentment did attract racists, mostly from outside the town. But overall, the Government’s reaction — relying on the criminal justice system to quell the immediate effect of violence, rather than considering a longer-term approach to the root causes of alienation — fuelled the impression that the working class, and those who lived outside London, were considered second-class citizens. Contrast Labour’s reaction with Margaret Thatcher’s after the Toxteth riots of 1981, when she immediately dispatched Michael Heseltine to lead a programme of urban regeneration. Reeves, meanwhile, has dismissed not just the phraseology of Levelling Up, but even the notion that the divergence between London and provincial England matters: “there are poor people in London.” YouGov finds that Starmer is seen as being as metropolitan as Badenoch, but her big advantage is that whereas only 10% of voters have yet to make up their minds about him, 39% remain uncertain about her.

And so, Labour has left a wide-open goal. If Kemi Badenoch does nothing, many of the Red Wall voters who supported Labour in the last election will abstain or defect to Reform. But she already has the advantage, leading the more powerful opposition; Nigel Farage has little chance of ever being in government. She must therefore directly appeal to the disenfranchised and hold out the promise that she will help those left-behind towns and cities to renew themselves.

The Levelling Up programme, which as an unpaid advisor I saw from the inside, failed not just for lack of money. It failed, as the NHS is failing, through a lack of innovative vision. So here’s a thought for Badenoch. What provincial Britain needs, and wants, are jobs for those trained with vocational skills. By 2029, working class (CDE) under-25s will be approaching 30. Those in the North and Midlands will be worried about their lack of opportunities. Local governments will be bankrupt. Decent jobs can only come by helping the most innovative provincial SMEs to grow more rapidly. Such firms exist in their hundreds despite the hostile policy environment. But to grow fast, they need venture capital. Britain abounds in this, but two-thirds of it goes to London and its Oxbridge satellites. The other three-quarters of Britain’s population is a venture-capital desert. No wonder there’s no growth: the greater part of our island is a stagnation nation. The migration nation follows Kemi to London.

“What provincial Britain needs, and wants, are jobs for those trained with vocational skills.”

Back in the early days of those “wasted 14 years” dismissed by Labour, we created two valuable public investment agencies. The British Business Bank (2014) and the National Infrastructure Fund (2015) have the expertise to finance the public infrastructure and private-sector venture capital which will ultimately be the essential driver of growth. Rishi Sunak had no interest in them, and nor has Reeves, but they are a Tory solution to a national problem waiting to be harnessed. Kemi Badenoch could announce that their mandates would be to equalise economic opportunities around the country and commit to devolving decision-taking to them. Thereby, she would have in her holster a credible strategy that the rival opposition parties cannot offer, and that Reeves has opted to ignore. As she and the Prime Minister announced to the Board of BlackRock, her preferred solution to past short-termism is to set up a new unit within the Treasury. One of its tasks will be to craft an “industrial policy”. Yet the Treasury and the rest of Whitehall are so bereft of the necessary skills to formulate one that it can only lead to further embarrassments. To dig itself out of the comedy that HS2 ends at Royal Oak, the Treasury has just committed £6 billion to extend it to Euston: an “industrial policy” only for London.

Badenoch has the gumption to deride the pretensions of Whitehall and the wit to make it amusing. Keir Starmer is, it’s sad to say, the perfect foil for such barbs. By using her expertise in finance for a unifying public purpose, Badenoch would kill three birds with one stone. She would combine an inspiring backstory with an appealingly optimistic agenda to Britain’s youth: Cool Britannia Redux. She would test the moral mettle of those former Tories who switched to the Liberal Democrats repelled by the greed agenda. Equalising economic opportunities around the nation is something that Ed Davey can neither deride nor deliver. And she can win the provincial working class — the Red Wall voters adrift, already disillusioned by Labour, tempted by Farage, but knowing in their hearts that regardless of his rhetoric, he will never have the power to improve their lives. In the process, she can reset the image of her party vis-à-vis its biggest problem. In 2007, it was that the Tories could not be trusted with the NHS. David Cameron courageously and successfully took that bull by the horns. In 2024, it is that the Tories cater to a finance industry dominated by greedy asset-strippers. Let BlackRock carouse with Labour. By repurposing Britain’s financial renown to heal the divide in our society, Badenoch can turn vice into virtue. Forget stagnation nation and migration nation: we could become innovation nation.


Sir Paul Collier is a Professor of Economics and Public Policy at the Oxford Blavatnik School of Government. His most recent book is Left Behind.


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Michael Cazaly
Michael Cazaly
29 days ago

What alienated Tory voters is that the Tory party has become the LibDems.
The LibDems (and Labour) won seats from the Tories because the Tory voters stayed at home, or voted Reform.
As an acolyte of Gove, it is unlikely that Badenoch will produce any policies which will change this, although she may well win a general election for the same reason that Starmer won: the electorate simply being fed up with incompetence.

Rob Mein
Rob Mein
29 days ago
Reply to  Michael Cazaly

I don’t know where this idea that Tory voters switched to Liberal comes from. Ipsos says 24% went to Reform and just 7% Liberal.

Jane Awdry
Jane Awdry
29 days ago
Reply to  Rob Mein

Getting Lib Dems back into the Tory Party will be difficult, as they are very much captured by the ‘trans’ agenda, which Kemi has vowed to take on. I hope she sticks to this, because I’m feeling increasingly politically homeless, as well as utterly fed up with a country where neither the government nor the national public broadcaster are either willing or able to say what a woman is.

j watson
j watson
29 days ago
Reply to  Michael Cazaly

The problem with this view is it’s not backed up at all by how folks actually voted. More switched to LibDems and Lab than to Reform. So the dilemma for Kemi is which way she leans. Reform direction may spike Farage and play to some of the Tory base, but it could condemn to longer term opposition.
It’s the problem with echo chambers. One becomes indignant with dissenting facts and complexity.

Peter James
Peter James
29 days ago
Reply to  j watson

Errr… Reform got more votes than the Libdems.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
29 days ago
Reply to  j watson

That’s not right. Reform got many more votes than the lib dumbs. That’s why the party first past the party first past the post system is no longer democratic.

Santiago Excilio
Santiago Excilio
29 days ago
Reply to  j watson

Perhaps you should take you own advice, acquaint yourself with the facts and stop posting the drivel that reverberates in the data free, echo-chamber of your own head.
From Ipsos:
“Ipsos data from interviews with n=4,909 2019 Conservative voters who voted in the July 4th General Election breaks as follows (our estimates suggest that in total 74% of 2019 Conservatives voted in the election, but a quarter – 26% – stayed at home). Just over half among those who did vote stayed with the Conservatives (53%) but one in four opted for Reform UK (24%). However, one in five voted for either Labour (12%) or the Liberal Democrats (7%) (and another 2% for the Greens). So Reform UK was the biggest single beneficiary, though almost as many switched to parties in the other direction.”

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
29 days ago
Reply to  Michael Cazaly

“Acolyte of Gove”

I’d suggest that even if she may have aligned herself with Gove in political terms in the past – as a way of gaining a strategic foothold in Tory ranks – she will become her own political entity. She first needs to “find her feet” and put the hard yards in with her party before turning to the electorate.

If you’re trying to “smear her by association”, you’ll be guilty of making a far too premature judgement and need to remember that politics is the art of the possible. It takes time, and sound judgement, not knee jerks.

Michael Cazaly
Michael Cazaly
27 days ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

The country is utterly broken. It doesn’t take a genius to work out how to fix it…most people have. Yet Kemi isn’t saying anything of consequence whatsoever…at a time when the Labour government is widely seen as useless. If not now, when? When will be a better opportunity?

Milton Gibbon
Milton Gibbon
29 days ago

This article has some lazy tropes. Cameron did not “win” with a promise of maintaining the NHS. He had to form a coallition government with the very party whose voters he could not win even with his “NHS, NHS, NHS” platitudes.

Similarly, Ed Davey is not the leader of a political party. His last campaign was disgusting anti-politics with no discussion of policy. The voters who turned to him need to have a long, hard look at themselves – more so than Reform voters who at least registered a protest vote backed by policy. The tactic of acting like a clown while downplaying serious political thought is far more dangerous to British political culture than Farage ever was.

The “greed agenda” which the author decries is summed up by lower taxes. This is a widely and deeply popular programme as long as people feel that the tax burden is reduced for them. Farmers thought that a vote for Labour wouldn’t hurt them. More fool them. This is the real impact of tax rises. We are already over-taxed and the real problem is people don’t feel that they get return on their investment. More tax but worse schools, healthcare, roads etc.. What is it all for?

As someone who lived grew up in London and has now moved out to the provinces the UK government is right to bet the house on the capital. The level of disenchantment and lack of drive even in the Home Counties just isn’t the same, let alone up north. If there was a vast pool of untapped talent out here then venture capital would have found it. The fact is that the best and brightest move to the South East (hint: if you haven’t then you might want to reflect on this).

j watson
j watson
29 days ago
Reply to  Milton Gibbon

Just response to one point re: worse schools – did you see the data and report last week showing best state schools now perform better than most private schools at English and Maths ?

Milton Gibbon
Milton Gibbon
29 days ago
Reply to  j watson

A dair poinnt but this has been the case for a long time. The trouble is that while they may be giving their pupils better grades the rounded education isn’t what it needs to be. This isn’t confined to the state sector – parents with children at private schools must ask themselves “what are they getting out of all the money I am investing in them?”. I would counter your point with all the recent articles about university students not being able to read properly and ask if state schools are really “improving” or whether public schools have been dragged down.

Gordon Arta
Gordon Arta
29 days ago
Reply to  j watson

Yet according to the National Literacy Trust 1 in 6 school leavers is functionally illiterate. That’s at least 11 years in the English education system, and they can barely read. They shouldn’t be allowed past Primary school, let alone out into the workplace.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
29 days ago
Reply to  Milton Gibbon

Correct. The author, like his latest tome, has been “Left Behind”.

Morten Hansen
Morten Hansen
29 days ago
Reply to  Milton Gibbon

As requested, I just reflected on not having moved to South East England. And I still wouldn’t want to. I could earn a lot more, but there’s more to life than money. Such as beautiful scenery, tranquility, low population density, available GP appointments, and so on. Then again, you’ll never hear me moaning about lack of opportunity, so perhaps it isn’t a fact that all of the best and brightest move to the SE? We may just have different priorities.

Milton Gibbon
Milton Gibbon
29 days ago
Reply to  Morten Hansen

I too have moved out because I wanted a different, better life – I’m not one to cast stones in glass houses. You clearly have a very high opinion of yourself but anecdote doesn’t make data:
Table_3.13_2122.ods
London’s taxes are double/triple those of other regions (1.5 times the SE, triple most other areas, NI more than 4 times as much). The GP appointments that the rest of the country relies on are paid for by the taxes of London.

Morten Hansen
Morten Hansen
29 days ago
Reply to  Milton Gibbon

I do have confidence in my capabilities. But that’s beside the point. I was responding to the sweeping and condescending “fact” that “the best and brightest move to the South East”.

Milton Gibbon
Milton Gibbon
29 days ago
Reply to  Morten Hansen

Condescending? If anything it was self-effacing! Far be it from me to talk down to one so capable.

Morten Hansen
Morten Hansen
28 days ago
Reply to  Milton Gibbon

Excellent. I’m glad we got that sorted. Thank you for agreeing

j watson
j watson
29 days ago

Much in this I could agree with and at last someone on the Right better recognising the problem was the Tories enabled ever greater regional inequality and never moved beyond slogans. Furthermore that a better analysis of what’s wrong with UK capitalism than just more tax cuts for the wealthy and wiser national investment decisions are needed.
I’m not convinced Kemi has impressed in first few weeks. Rather weaker than expected IMO, but to be fair v early days and she’s a big job first getting her parliamentary party on side. Only a third supported her. I hope though the positive vibe Author conveys proves correct.

Walter Marvell
Walter Marvell
29 days ago

Lib Dems will become extinct again in 2029. They are a confection. A freak by product like Starmer victory of 14 Years of Fake Tory Progressive rule. Their three pillars – spend spend on the black hole 200bn NHS, rejoin the tanking dysfunctional EU, and go mad green – all will be exposed as disasters by 2029. Many are just Nimbys and these are thdir fig leafuxury beliefs. Madness for Kemi to chase a party whose voters are mainly made up of angry Tories outraged by the quasi Socialist Green Nut progressive party of the Fools Cameron May Johnson and Sunak. PC right about her potential and need to re think levelling up.

Douglas Redmayne
Douglas Redmayne
29 days ago
Reply to  Walter Marvell

So you hope. The Liberals could do very well in 2029 if the Tories ally with Reform or drift to the right.

Graeme Crosby
Graeme Crosby
29 days ago

The Conservatives desperately need to return to the right. They have been centre left for years.

Santiago Excilio
Santiago Excilio
29 days ago

No, they won’t – unless they undergo a wholesale change of ideology, which is unlikely. The UK (along with a number of other western countries) is approaching the point of no-return with the ‘social democratic’ model of a big state, high taxation, over-spending, high regulation, low growth economy. This model is *only* sustainable if there are a) continuous productivity improvements in the public sector, b) continuous real GDP growth per capita in the private sector and c) where available significant extra-economic wealth resources available to the state to substitute for personal & corporate taxation (see: Norway, Saudi, UAE etc.).

The UK has none of these. Public sector productivity has not improved, at all, in 25 years whilst the state has expanded hugely. Real GDP per capita growth has been anaemic and GDP capita in real terms is still below 2008 levels, and the UK has no golden commodity goose to bolster the treasury coffers.

It’s not a question of ‘drifting to the right’ or left or wherever. It’s about honesty in the face of reality. At some point the general populace are going to have to be told/realise the truth, which is that this model is simply unaffordable, without some radical and far reaching changes. These will involve significantly shrinking the size of the state, dealing with the unfunded public sector pensions liability (£2.7Tn and rising by £150bn a year), getting rid of whole swathes of regulation so that businesses can grow, controlling illegal immigration, recognising the NHS is past any hope of reform and switching to a state supported, insurance funded model where the money follows the patient (there are plenty of examples to choose from), delivering cheap and affordable energy at the expense of excessive “green” ideology, completely reforming planning so that infrastructure and houses can be built and not stymied by NIMBYS, newts and bats, and forcing the idle and feckless back into work.

None of this sounds remotely like a LimDem manifesto, and it isn’t. Currently it isn’t anybody, because it is going to be a very hard message to sell, it is however what is needed.

Alan Tonkyn
Alan Tonkyn
28 days ago

Your penultimate paragraph spells out well the very tough measures we need to take to prevent the death of our nation. To sell these necessary things to the people in a democracy requires statesmanship and communication skills of the highest order; I hope Kemi has these, and wish her well, but I’m not too confident. She needs to go beyond the usual shallow partial analyses and slogans to show people the reality of where we are and where we’re going. For example, she needs to get people to face up to the fact that ‘reform’ of the NHS can’t be along the ‘business as usual’ Cameron and Starmer lines. As you have said, we need a completely different funding model, making people take more responsibility for their health (and old age) care via an insurance-based model, as is used in more successful systems on the Continent and elsewhere. This, and all the other items on your list, will be a hard sell, but sell them we must.

Kathleen Burnett
Kathleen Burnett
29 days ago

This is a ‘more of the same’ type of analysis. Has the author read Mary’s recent piece for the real issues and solution?

j watson
j watson
29 days ago

Mary didn’t provide any solutions. She listed out where she thought blame lay but absolutely zero Policy propositions or how she’d convince sufficient folks to support them. Classic. Only really half engaged in the challenge and getting the Unherd gig doesn’t require full engagement

Andrew R
Andrew R
29 days ago
Reply to  j watson

Mary doesn’t have to that’s the job of our elected politicians who are either unwilling or totally incapable of enabling change.

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
29 days ago

We can trace it back to Boris Johnson’s bragging incompetence that with Brexit we could “have our cake and eat it”; this ensured that the European Commission would not cooperate with continuing the Dublin Principle, which enabled us to return asylum seekers coming from mainland Europe.
It was silly to expect the continuance of the application of the Dublin Regulation after leaving the EU but this point is pretty much irrelevant now anyway, since the Regulation doesn’t even function in/among the remaining EU member states. It is dead law.

Graeme Crosby
Graeme Crosby
29 days ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

The Dublin principle wasn’t functioning before the Brexit vote. Virtually no one was returned to their point of origin.

Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
29 days ago
Reply to  Graeme Crosby

We actually received more migrants than we exported under the Dublin Regulation.

Richard Littlewood
Richard Littlewood
29 days ago

How can anyone vote for the Tories after they dethroned a sitting Prime Minister, and then changed the party’s rules to ensure a non-entity, Sunak, with no political allegiance except to himself, became Prime Minister without needing to win a vote?
They do not care for democracy, they do not care for legal process. They think choosing a Prime Minister is a game.

Kolya Wolf
Kolya Wolf
29 days ago

What did that ‘sitting Prime Minister’ accomplish other than Brexit?

Douglas Redmayne
Douglas Redmayne
29 days ago

Olukemi won’t attract many Reform or potential Reform votets for obvious reasons. Reform will also draw voters attention to her pro immigration record and insinuate a self interest. If she boasts about being a cultural Christian then she willbe off putting to people in tne centre. That will help tne Liberals. The only option lef therefore will be to espouse a low tax agenda; this will make people cling to Labour. I suspect the Tories are finished and good riddance.

JR Stoker
JR Stoker
29 days ago

What a gross remark. Whilst no doubt a few on the fringe of Reform still think like that, most voters do not. And the point of tax reform is to benefit the poorer echelons before doing anything for the rich.

Simon Blanchard
Simon Blanchard
29 days ago

That all sounds like a to do list I could get behind. But then so did “levelling up”. Kemi seems to me to be a lone star and the people remaining around her, the same old bunch of generic crooks and careerists. She’d need a crack team to get anything done. Where’s the talent?

Jonathan Andrews
Jonathan Andrews
29 days ago

All these ideas might work, how would I know but it seems to be singing from the hymn sheet of last few decades. That is, that we just smarter people making smarter decisions.

In some cases, we do need intelligent government strategies, in others it’s better that we leave to individuals,families and businesses. I’m not going to pretend I know how to decides these questions; the devil’s in the detail but can we have a period where our politicians believe that, on balance, they should not intervene and only ever do so when there little alternative.

It strikes me a incredible that the UK’s average income is lower than the poor state in the US. But more incredible is that we don’t seem to recognise that maybe they are doing something right.

Frankly, the above article suggests more of the same.

Tyler Durden
Tyler Durden
29 days ago

Nigerians have been a significant migration group to Britain over the last 10 years. So I think what you’ll find in the Badenoch/Patel administration is a way of selling ongoing mass migration that will be a little more palatable to the middle-class Tory voters that wanted this pair to lead the party.
Meanwhile, the Petitioners for a new general election come from constituencies who rightly wanted an anti-immigration Jenrick leadership.

Peter Stephenson
Peter Stephenson
29 days ago

the still staggering figure of £41,000 – 41,000 per what?

Kevin Godwin
Kevin Godwin
29 days ago

I understand that it’s an average figure, per asylum seeker per year.

Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
29 days ago

Badenoch does not need to woo the LibDems, especially not those of the leafy Home Counties commuter belt. They’ll come crying back once Labour’s vindictive tax policies start to bite.

Caradog Wiliams
Caradog Wiliams
29 days ago

At least the Labour Party has a plan:
To deprive us of energy so that we have to tough it out every winter, not to rock the boat with the NHS and keep going as usual, to remove private schools to prevent thinking, to tax the middle classes until the state owns everything, to keep as far away as possible from the USA and the ‘evil one’, to use the police to stop discussion of alternatives, to encouraged immigration to solve the problem of Brits wanting to work from home or not wanting to work at home, to join the EU so that we are stuck for ever.
The result of all of this is a grey country of nothing. Our fields will be covered by wind turbines or solar panels, farm animals will disappear, all jobs in heavy industry will go, we will have to import everything we use. It will be safer inside because all police will work from home, as will council workers, teachers. Better that nobody leaves their houses. Many old people will die which will release the pressure on the NHS.
What do the Tories offer as an alternative? I believe the answer is a big fat zero.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
29 days ago

Nothing will happen. Kemi went to Davos and received her instructions.
Talk right and when you get in, keep on tacking left.
They must think we’re daft!

Kolya Wolf
Kolya Wolf
29 days ago
Reply to  UnHerd Reader

Davos is not a thing.

Andrew R
Andrew R
29 days ago
Reply to  Kolya Wolf

Rather pointless that it exists in that case, eh.

John Tyler
John Tyler
29 days ago

Her task is not to align, attract or adapt to anyone else’s ideals and policies. She must set out and then instil set of values. It is from values that policies should develop, not from focus groups, polls and opponents. When policies are founded and rooted in values they can adapt to circumstances without compromising what really matters. When policies are based on who shouts loudest or what pollsters declare they quickly become a useless mishmash of competing approaches.

Stick to your guns, Kemi, and the inevitable storms will pass.

Peter Beard
Peter Beard
29 days ago

If Kemi or any other wannabe wants to succeed they will need to convince the nation it needs fundamental structural change. Collier is right about the need to address levelling up but he also points out that there are a few reasons it will not happen on the scale that is needed.
Neither Levelling Up nor defanging identity politics will ever happen unless the ‘Big State’ is made fit for the purpose. The Big State doesn’t want reform, it is happy as it is meddling with our lives while enjoying 4 day weeks, comfortable salaries, and a heavily gilded and early retirement. Successive governments have invested so much power in the big state it now exercises too much control to allow itself to be reformed. We have surrendered to it, we have allowed ourselves to become the captives of an unelected tyrant that now determines how we live. If you doubt this just think about how it took over our lives, and our elected government, during Covid. It has the NGOs, the civil service and the BBC and a lot more to uphold its grip on the country.
I have no tried and tested solution, and if I did their misinformation tsars would already be discrediting it. The only chance we have is populism, using the ballot box while we can, to elect politicians that we would be willing to take to the streets in order to support and then mandate them to reform the House of Lords so that all its members were a consequence of proportional representation. This would create an elected chamber with a direct mandate from the electorate to become the Supreme Court of the UK and to enforce the sovereign right of Parliament to determine and enforce the laws of the land.
This revised House of Lords would then be mandated to ensure the State acted strictly in accordance with the Laws of the United Kingdom.
Only then would Parliament be able to take on the state.
Only then will Parliament represent the people.

Chipoko
Chipoko
29 days ago

“As a black immigrant, she can craft a credible and ethical Britain First agenda without taints of racism or imperialism.”
This implies that anyone who is not a black immigrant would be tainted by racism or imperialism.
I detest this identitarian disease that has so deeply infected public discourse – or, what’s left of it that has any value.

Philip Stott
Philip Stott
29 days ago

As long as Kemi promises to abandon nut-zero she’s got my vote.

JR Hartley
JR Hartley
29 days ago

It’s all very well going on about venture capital in the North. But when there is no scope for ordinary business, as anything other than services are imported at sub-cost cheapness from abroad, businesses will never start.
Until you can pick up a random item at a Tesco Extra, and not see “Made in China” on the bottom, all talk of new businesses is futile. This can only be fixed by having a trade policy that benefits US, not “global prosperity” (just like most of the fastest-growing nations have). I don’t see any party interested in that – just look at the reaction to Trump’s tariffs.

James Kirk
James Kirk
28 days ago

Gumption? Labour have been an open goal for twenty weeks. Where was she? Alex Burghart showed her how PMQs should go, there’s no need for a sword’s length between her and Starmer who just mainly pokes fun at her, the only time he ever smiles. He probably looks forward to Wednesdays against such a weak opponent.
The Farmer’s protest. Who were the key proponents? Clarkson and Farage. English men and if you think that’s racist let’s ship in Denzel Washington, Vivek Ramaswarmy or a young Morgan Freeman if you must ship in outsiders to sort the place out.

Charles Hedges
Charles Hedges
28 days ago

The LDs are largly the product of hard work done by others, namely their ancestors and those who undertake technically skilled, dirty and dangerous work today. Much of our problem in the UK is due to the Rentier class which has expanded to include much of the public sector. Orwell wrote about this in his essays.
A combination of inherited wealth without the noblesse oblige of the gentry; long time spent in education undertaking non- engineering degrees; a feebleness of spirit which means they refuse to be tempered by adversity and have their mettle tested; produce people who are as bout as useful as chocolate teapots. However, they consider themselves morally and intellectually superior and as consequence entitled to a life of material comfort and security. They are no different to the priests of ancient Egypt or abbots living of the sweat of serfs in the Middle Ages.

Rob Britton
Rob Britton
25 days ago

‘Badenoch needs to start, though, by getting rid of the greedy stench of the Liz Truss package that still cloaks the party: the tax-cutting for the rich and public-service cutting for everyone else. This was widely recognised as morally repellent, alienating the many Conservative voters who fled to the Liberal Democrats”
This was actually quite a good article until I read this and then I lost interest! Actually they fled to Reform.

Kirk Susong
Kirk Susong
3 days ago

The solution to job growth is the govt picking winners and losers? I don’t think so. The only path to job growth is through individuals willing to risk time talent and treasure in pursuit of their own ends. These people — let’s call them entrepreneurs — are always and everywhere the engines of innovation and growth. The only thing govt can do is the hardest for it to do: nothing. Just get out of the way and stop thinking you can solve the problem. You can’t. Only they can. And they’re not elected and they don’t like you taxing their success.

Champagne Socialist
Champagne Socialist
29 days ago

#TLDR