The leader of Britain’s dwindling Conservative Party has taken a thinly veiled swipe at President Donald J. Trump and his allies in a recent interview with the Telegraph newspaper. Olukemi Olufunto Adegoke Badenoch—aka ‘Kemi’—was elected leader of her party in November 2024. Her party presided over the largest increase in net migration to the United Kingdom in history.
She told the Telegraph this week: “Having appeal doesn’t mean that people want you running their lives. That’s one of the things that we need to make sure that we remind people.
“This isn’t I’m A Celebrity or Strictly Come Dancing,” she said, in reference to two UK reality tv shows similar to The Apprentice. “You don’t vote for the person that you’re enjoying watching and then switch off when the show’s over.”
Badenoch’s comments come as her party continues to struggle against Nigel Farage’s Reform UK Party. Farage himself, like President Trump, has appeared on reality TV shows, which is likely what triggered Badenoch’s mask-off moment.
“You’ve got to live with that person in your life, in your family’s life, at work, and so on. That’s what elections are about. It’s not just about watching a show and switching it off. We’ve got to move away from politics as show business,” she concluded.
This week, Farage unveiled a slate of defections, including elected officials from the Conservative Party, who have now joined his Reform movement. The news comes as internal party fissures have emerged, with DeSantis-like splitters attempting to wrest control of the party from Farage, much as Republican forces attempted with President Trump during the presidential primary.
It is not the first, and unlikely the last time that Farage has been the subject of a leadership coup, with former adversaries such as Suzanne Evans, Robert Kilroy-Silk, and Neil Hamilton now enjoying political obscurity.