By Emmanuel Nduka
Kemi Badenock, a Nigerian-born British politician has been announced the new leader of the Conservative Party.
Badenoch who was crowned the new Conservative Party leader on Saturday, after the four-month-long race to replace Rishi Sunak reached the finish line, will be at the helm as the party looks to recover from the July election result which saw it return just 121 MPs.
At the close of polls on Thursday, Badenock and her closest rival, Robert Jenrick, thanked their backers for their support throughout the contest.
She described the party as a “family” and said that it was “much more to me than a membership organisation”. Jenrick also called for the party to “move past the drama” of recent years and “unite”.
“Together we can put an end to the excuses, move past the drama, and unite our party,” he wrote on X.
Immigration, the economy, and how the Conservatives can rebuild trust with the electorate and win back voters they lost at the election were all discussed at length throughout the campaign.
The party lost seats to Labour, the Liberal Democrats and Reform UK in the July poll. Dame Priti Patel, Mel Stride, Tom Tugendhat and James Cleverly spent the summer campaigning alongside Jenrick and Badenoch after they put their names forward in the nominations at the end of July.
Both Dame Priti and Stride were the first two contenders to be eliminated in September, leaving four by the time the party gathered in Birmingham for its autumn conference at the end of October.