Tories mull replacing Badenoch as party leader after poor ratings – Report
Unrest within the United Kingdom’s Conservative Party could see Kemi Badenoch booted out as leader after poll ratings for the party have dipped ahead of next week’s local elections.
The Tories are expected to lose a significant number of seats in the elections.
Polls indicated that Badenoch has performed poorly and focused on the wrong issues in the six months she has served as Tory leader.
More than two dozen members of parliament told Bloomberg that the British-Nigerian is not the right person to take the party into the next general election due by mid-2029.
Last year, Prime Minister Keir Starmer led the Labour Party to victory, ending 14 years of Conservative rule in the UK.
The Tories, who are looking to make a comeback, believe Badenoch should be replaced with Robert Jenrick, the right-wing shadow justice secretary.
Jenrick has voiced ambitions to unite the right-wing vote and reduce competition from Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, signaling internal challenges putting Badenoch’s leadership under significant pressure.
The decision also comes as Nigel Farage’s right-wing Reform Party has consistently outperformed the Tories in recent polls, threatening to replace them as the main force on the right.
Badenoch has focused on several issues that critics consider the “wrong” or problematic priorities for the Conservative Party at this time.
She has concentrated heavily on opposing what she terms “left-wing nonsense”, including excessive regulation and identity politics.
Critics say she has failed to demonstrate clear, detailed policy frameworks and has focused instead on broad conservative principles and cultural issues, raising concerns about the party’s ability to present a comprehensive political agenda to voters. (The Cable)