Drop out, Kemi, says Brexiteer peer, so right wing can unite behind Truss to block Sunak
Kemi #Kemi
© UK Parliament/Jessica Taylor/PA Wire Kemi Badenoch answering a question in the House of Commons when she was a local government minister
Former Brexit minister Lord Frost has urged Kemi Badenoch to pull out of the Tory leadership contest so there can be “unity among free marketeers”. The Tory peer says he is backing Liz Truss to be the next prime minister.
“Kemi and Suella Braverman set out convincing programmes, with differing emphases, for change,” the 57-year-old Frost, who led the UK’s Brexit negotiations from 2019, wrote in The Daily Telegraph.
“But Liz’s depth of experience, her energy and ideas – as well as the simple fact she has the most votes of the three – put her in the lead. It is now time for pragmatism. I urge Kemi to stand down in return for a serious job in a Truss administration.”
Ms Badenoch, a former equalities minister who was first elected to parliament in 2017, is coming under increasing pressure to withdraw and back Ms Truss, the Foreign Secretary, to keep Rishi Sunak or Penny Mordaunt out of No 10.
Ms Badenoch’s campaign, however, said she is “in it to win”. Her spokesman said: “Kemi has brought interesting ideas and a new approach to this leadership contest. She is looking forward to the debates this weekend. She has no intention of stepping down and is in it to win.”
Lord Frost also stepped up his attacks on Ms Mordaunt as being “absent on parade” when he worked with her on post-Brexit negotiations last year.
Ms Truss is picking up support from the Tory right after Attorney General Suella Braverman was last night (Thursday, July 14) eliminated from an increasingly bitter leadership race that saw Mr Sunak and trade minister Ms Mordaunt bolster their positions as frontrunners.
Mr Sunak, the former chancellor, came out on top in yesterday’s voting, and in second was Ms Mordaunt, who was bearing the brunt of the attacks from rival camps as she gained the most momentum. Ms Braverman fared the worst in the second round and was eliminated to leave five contenders, also including backbencher Tom Tugendhat – who will take part in the first televised debate tonight.
She came out in support of Ms Truss, describing the Foreign Secretary as the “best person to unleash the opportunities of Brexit” and deliver tax cuts, as the right of the party seeks to rally round a single candidate.
For more stories from where you live, visit InYourArea.