Badenoch and Jenrick at odds on tackling immigration

by Pelican Press
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Badenoch and Jenrick at odds on tackling immigration

BBC Robert Jenrick and Kemi Badenoch on the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg BBC

Immigrants must leave foreign conflicts behind them when they come to the UK, Conservative leadership contender Kemi Badenoch has said.

She told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg she believed in “western values, the principles which have made this country great, and I think that we need to make sure that we continue to abide by those principles, to keep the society that we have now”.

As the Tories begin their party conference in Birmingham, leadership rival Robert Jenrick told the same programme immigration was at the top of his list of issues to fix.

He said the UK needed to leave the European Convention on Human Rights to resolve the problem, a move Badenoch has not signed up to.

Two other candidates remain in the Conservative leadership contest – shadow home secretary James Cleverly and shadow security minister Tom Tugendhat.

All four will use the conference, which ends on 2 October, to present their cases to Tory activists.

After Parliament returns, Tory MPs will narrow the field down to two candidates in votes on 9 and 10 October, before party members are balloted on their choice.

A winner and successor to Rishi Sunak will be announced on 2 November.

an article for the Sunday Telegraph to say the country expected immigrants to share the UK’s values.

“We can not be naïve and assume immigrants will automatically abandon ancestral ethnic hostilities at the border, or that all cultures are equally valid. They are not,” she wrote.

The two frontrunners in the leadership campaign race have disagreed over their approaches to tackling immigration, which many Tories believe caused millions of voters to desert the party for Reform UK in July’s general election.

In his interview with Laura Kuenssberg, Jenrick took issue with Badenoch’s emphasis on culture.

Stressing his commitment to capping net migration in the tens of thousands, he said: “Numbers also matter.

“Just saying ‘I’ll have a plan in a few years’ time’ is a recipe for in-fighting and for losing the public’s trust. I have a plan,” he added.

Badenoch accused him of misrepresenting her position, saying numbers did matter but “culture matters even more. Who comes into the country is absolutely critical.”

Asked which cultures were “less valid”, she said it was “not about labelling cultures”.

“I think that cultures where women are told that they should not work, I would knock on doors… and you would see somebody at the door who says ‘I can’t speak to you, I will get my husband’. I don’t think that is as equally valid as our culture.”

Badenoch, who was born in London but spent her childhood in Nigeria and the US before returning to the UK, added she did not want “this country to turn into one I was running away from”.

Asked about the Conservatives’ worst-ever election defeat on Sky News, Cleverly said the public “didn’t like the constant infighting” or the “bickering” in the party.

“They didn’t like the fact that as soon as someone became prime minister, there were people within the party who set about removing them as prime minister.

“We didn’t do that just once or twice. We did it over and over again. The British people told us that they wanted us to think about them, not to think about ourselves.”

Also on Sky News, Tugendhat pointed to his record in the military and other public service to “demonstrate” his “character”.

Asked if the Tories needed another “posh boy leader from a great public school”, he said: “I think the Conservative Party needs a leader who can lead, and you can judge me on the decisions my parents made 35 years ago or you can judge me on the decisions I have made for the last 35 years.

“I have chosen consistently to serve our country. I have put myself on the frontline in Iraq and Afghanistan.”



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