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Kemi Badenoch: Equality Act being misinterpreted ‘fed discontent’ in communities

17 Aug 2024 5 minute read
Kemi Badenoch. Photo Victoria Jones/PA Wire

Tory leadership candidate Kemi Badenochas said the Equality Act being misinterpreted has “fed a lot of the discontent” seen in communities across parts of the UK.

The Equality Act 2010 legally protects people from discrimination in the workplace and in wider society, replacing previous anti-discrimination laws in relation to disability, age, gender and race with a single Act.

During her tenure as minister for women and equalities Ms Badenoch was critical of the Equality Act, specifically relating to trans women in female spaces.

After violent racist disorder across England in response to the killing of three young girls in Southport, allegations were made of “two-tier policing”, with claims that officers are overly lenient with protesters of progressive causes or racial minorities.

Factionalised

In an online rally, Ms Badenoch, who is currently the shadow housing and communities secretary, was asked about society “becoming more factionalised”.

She said: “I think that one of the things we need to strongly emphasise is equality under the law.

“There are too many people who have misinterpreted the Equality Act and think that there are different groups which are protected in different ways. That is not true.

“It is one of the things that has fed a lot of the discontent within communities, whether they’re complaining about two-tier policing or about the equality law being misapplied. You see it, whether it’s in the battles between women and trans rights activists, between different religions, between men and women, between black and white.

“We can stop all that, but we need to make sure that we give people something common.”

Zeitgeist

She added: “Allowing the cultural zeitgeist to talk as if we are all in different factions or we’re all in different identity groups is one of the reasons why people are beginning to see more difference rather than see more in common.”

At last month’s General Election the Conservatives suffered the party’s worst loss in history, coming third in many seats to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK.

Ms Badenoch ruled out a Tory merger with Reform, saying: “The best way to deal with that problem is being our authentic selves.

“I believe in free and fair competition. If another party decides that it wants to be the party of the right, what we should do as Conservatives is be better than them. We don’t need to merge with another party.

“In a free and fair market of ideas, we should be defeating the ideas of Reform, and every other party for that matter. A merger will just add to the confusion.

“If we have not yet decided who we are and what the Conservative Party is about, if we are still arguing with ourselves, how does merging with another party fix that? We’re just going to be arguing with more people.”

‘Fantasists’

Ms Badenoch also criticised the Liberal Democrats, describing them as an “incoherent party” of “fantasists”, and called on the Tories to “take the fight” to their neighbours on the opposition benches.

Asked how the party should tackle the Lib Dems she said: “The same way we handle Labour and Reform – by being better than them.

“We are a much broader, a deeper movement than they are. We are a broader church. We can do better than them.

“The truth is the Lib Dems are an incoherent party. They are a party of fantasists.

“They have policies where they want people, they want the country to have open borders, but they don’t want to build any more housing.

“What we don’t do is take the fight to the Lib Dems, and we need to do that.

“So being better than them is the basic but making sure that we don’t allow them to get away with many of the untruths that they put out.”

The MP for North West Essex is one of six Tory leadership hopefuls, and will face off against James Cleverly, Robert Jenrick, Dame Priti Patel, Mel Stride and Tom Tugendhat.

With the Conservatives only outperforming Labour in the over-60s age category, Ms Badenoch shared concerns about their ability to attract support from younger voters.

Young People

She said: “We also need to make sure that we have policies that young people can see are targeted towards them. Many young people I speak to think that we’re a party for old people, and that is not true.

“We need to make sure that they have something to aspire to. We have always been the party of aspiration.

“Some of that will be around home ownership. If people don’t put roots down and start families, have homes, they’re not going to become Conservatives.”

Ms Badenoch’s campaign is titled Renewal 2030 as she pledges to make the Tories “ready to serve our country again”.


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Adrian
Adrian
21 days ago

She’s absolutely right. Lockdown protests were treated with zero tolerance. Several police officers were injured in the 2022 BLM riots and a couple of days later Starmer filmed himself taking the knee to the rioters. There was a riot in Harehills and the police withdrew, with very few subsequent arrest: riots in Southport and the rioters are banged up in a matter of days. The Manchester Airport thugs still haven’t been charged with anything. 2-Tier Kier is a perfect nickname for the fool.

Jeff
Jeff
21 days ago

Word salad.

Mawkernewek
Mawkernewek
21 days ago

I can’t imagine many of the rioters have actually read the Equality Act 2010.

Perhaps it is the right wing media grifters who have misrepresented these things that we should look to for the case.

Alan Jones
Alan Jones
21 days ago

Funny how an absolute drubbing at the polls last month has suddenly concentrated her mind somewhat. Has she forgotten already the outright hostility & divisions that her party constantly put out there when in power with both rhetoric & in practice. Remember her nodding in fervent agreement while sitting on the front benches in westminster, while a fellow minister proposed yet another spiteful measure to punch down on the people of this country & then doing the tv & media rounds to defend even the most vile new laws & ideas. The word salad as Jeff describes it correctly makes… Read more »

Linda Jones
Linda Jones
20 days ago

Inequality is the biggest problem within the UK. Most of the population are fighting over a small piece of the economic cake while a small minority run off with the rest. Condoned or encouraged by the tories.

Charles Coombes
Charles Coombes
20 days ago

The tenure of the Conservative Party is the only reason this abuse of others came to the fore. Put your own house in order.

Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
20 days ago

‘Fantasist’. A word which describes her perfectly. There is very little that separates the six runners in the Tory leadership contest but if they make her their leader, they will not get off first base in their goal to be the party of government in five years time. The party of ‘aspiration’ indeed. It aspires to be Reform UK and cannot aspire to be ‘better’ (worse) than them only just as evil and the runners show that this is what they aspire to. She totally fails to understand that moderate Tory voters went to the ‘fantasist’ Lib Dems to show… Read more »

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