Islamist terrorism is something that should never be appeased,” said Kemi Badenoch during the course of her campaign to be elected the new leader of Britain’s Conservative Party. “Israel is at the front line,” she continued, “and it is surrounded by a lot of enemies. I think what they are doing is extraordinary.... I am very sympathetic to the Israeli argument.”

On November 2, the long, drawn-out leadership campaign reached its climax, and Badenoch was declared the new leader of the Conservative Party and thus the leader of His Majesty’s Loyal Opposition in the House of Commons. She is the first Black woman to head a UK political party.

When the Conservatives suffered a historic defeat in the general election of 2024, then-leader Rishi Sunak resigned, and the party decided that it would not be sensible to rush into electing a new leader. They agreed on a system that would take well over three months to yield its result.

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